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National GeographicFreshwaterHeroPete McBride paddled and hiked the length of the Colorado River Delta, photographing and filming an unprecedented conservation success—the mighty river's triumphant, albeit temporary, return to the sea.
➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe
➡ Get More Nat GeoLive: http://bit.ly/MoreNatGeoLive
About Nat Geo Live (National Geographic Live):
Thought-provoking presentations by today's leading explorers, scientists, and photographers.
Get More National Geographic:
OfficialSite: http://bit.ly/NatGeoOfficialSite
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About National Geographic:
National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their world-class scientists, photographers, journalists, and filmmakers, Nat Geo gets you closer to the stories that matter and past the edge of what's possible.
Upcoming Events at National Geographic Live!
http://events.nationalgeographic.com/events/
Learn About the Freshwater Initiative
http://environment.nationalgeographic.com/environment/freshwater/about-freshwater-initiative/
The National Geographic Live series brings thought-provoking presentations by today’s leading explorers, scientists, photographers, and performing artists right to you. Each presentation is filmed in front of a live audience at National Geographic headquarters in Washington, D.C. New clips air every Monday.
ChasingRivers, Part 1: The Colorado | Nat Geo Live
https://youtu.be/xt5uJrWW1gE
National Geographic
https://www.youtube.com/natgeo

published:10 Nov 2014

views:255800

The Colorado River is a lifeline in the desert, its water sustaining tens of millions of people in seven states, as well as endangered fish and wildlife. However, demand on the river's water now exceeds its supply, leaving the river so over-tapped that it no longer flows to the sea. (Video by Pete McBride. Flights by Lighthawk, Ecoflight.)
Learn more and be part of the solution: www.AmericanRivers.org/Colorado

published:17 Apr 2013

views:207386

The Colorado River is so much more than something we raft and fish in. Millions of people in the western U.S. drink water that comes from the river. Millions more use electricity generated by hydroelectric power plants along the rivers 1,450-mile course. Most of the produce on our table is grown using water from the river and its tributaries. When you think about it, the Colorado River is so much more than just a river, its a lifeline for the southwestern U.S. In the Denver7 special presentation Colorado River: Lifeline of the West, hosts LisaHidalgo and Eric Lupher share the story of a river that has shaped the landscape for millions of years but is now having itself reshaped by people trying to harness its power.

published:06 Aug 2017

views:6442

6 day Rafting & Hiking trip on Colorado River in the Upper Grand Canyon - Lee's Ferry to Phantom Ranch. Major highlights: NorthCanyon, South Canyon, Vasey's Paradise, RedwallCavern, Bridge of Sigh, hike at mile 36 and hike at Eminence Camp, Saddle Canyon, Nankoweap, Little Colorado River, Carbon Creek/Lava Canyon hike, Tabernacle hike.
After river trip, on the 7th day we walked up to the South Rim (separate video from the Grand Canyon Arizona playlist shows that part of the trip).
Re-post of my 2010 video. The quality cannot match my recent 4K uploads, but the trip was so stunning and the memories so alive - I decided to re-post.
Recorded Sep 21-26 2010 in HD with Canon HV30.
Music:
Deuter - Koyasan - 05 - Sound ofInvisibleWatersAvailable here: https://amazon.com/dp/B00M24GGBO/
Broekhuis, Keller & Schonwalder - Bologna2000 - Part 3
Broekhuis, Keller & Schönwälder – Official Website:
http://bks-em.eu
Broekhuis, Keller & Schönwälder Label:
http://manikin.de
Broekhuis, Keller & Schönwälder music available at:
https://manikinrecords.bandcamp.com
Deuter - East of the Full Moon - 07 - EarthShadow
Available at: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00M24RZLY/
This video is licensed/shared under the Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0InternationalLicense - You can use short segments of the video (except for the music) for non-commercial purposes, given that you provide proper attribution to this YT channel.
--------------------------------------
About AmazingPlaces on Our Planet:
Immerse yourself in scenic beautiful places on our planet without the distraction of words.
New 4K video every Friday or every second Friday.
Subscribe: https://goo.gl/Aoym5p
Facebook: https://facebook.com/milosh9k
Twitter: https://twitter.com/milosh9k
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+milosh9k
Website: https://milosh9k.com
Movies On Map: https://goo.gl/LdNNqX
Watch More Amazing Places on Our Planet: All 4K Ultra HD Videos: https://youtube.com/watch?v=BRhj5sLA6EI&list=PLwJH-XOKXh0g2FJ-6J5JuAowQd7R9M1lP
US National Parks in 4K: https://youtube.com/watch?v=HLmOkDBfxv0&list=PLwJH-XOKXh0jaAoGxECimjQbnNl_rggZs
Canada in 4K: https://youtube.com/watch?v=LhfNrsEghkA&list=PLwJH-XOKXh0gJ-q0LHGYM3VYQ3IRysIgt
China in 4K: https://youtube.com/watch?v=OEbZ5Y-sxAo&list=PLwJH-XOKXh0hdrJrRbPxCxDNovIgzr44p
Southern Africa in 4K: https://youtube.com/watch?v=iywqpda7d8k&list=PLwJH-XOKXh0j3OtsfowK08I24v00oKaK0
Amazing Trails: https://youtube.com/watch?v=FiS4u98Scx8&list=PLwJH-XOKXh0j8j-HHjonOxmHStpNkHOgq
Indonesia in 4K: https://youtube.com/watch?v=BHqNWkkMzI0&list=PLwJH-XOKXh0jAWdrO-7QGu_qyG3JGRd_C
Iceland in 4K: https://youtube.com/watch?v=O7okOo1cBa0&list=PLwJH-XOKXh0hi961aTqDUET-cezH5cKSm
Best selection by year: https://youtube.com/watch?v=ICFQS_jpzFY&list=PLwJH-XOKXh0hqXey9O_PIBUX_L6DlvRL-

published:25 Jan 2015

views:341689

A new agreement between Mexico and the United States called Minute 319 will ensure more water flows into the Colorado River delta in Mexico, helping to restore parts of the once fertile region.
Related article: http://nyti.ms/ZI94Hc
Please visit http://nyti.ms/13qMiXp in order to embed this video
Subscribe to the TimesVideo newsletter for free and get a handpicked selection of the best videos from The New York Times every week: http://bit.ly/timesvideonewsletter
Subscribe on YouTube: http://bit.ly/U8Ys7n
Watch more videos at: http://nytimes.com/video
---------------------------------------------------------------
Want more from The New York Times?
Twitter: https://twitter.com/nytvideo
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Whether it's reporting on conflicts abroad and political divisions at home, or covering the latest style trends and scientific developments, New York Times video journalists provide a revealing and unforgettable view of the world. It's all the news that's fit to watch. On YouTube.
Bringing Back the Colorado River Delta - 2013
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheNewYorkTimes

published:22 Apr 2013

views:25797

In the spring of 2014, for the first time in 16 years, water was released into the dry bed of the Colorado River Delta, and it reached all the way to the Sea of Cortez. But it didn't last for long.
Pete McBride, river advocates, and scientists were there to document the natural wonder of this historic event, as well as the pure joy this brought to Mexican communities who live on the Colorado Delta. This film is proof that nature isn't gone, it’s simply waiting for us to give it a chance.
"Delta Dawn" won the best short film award at the 2014 BanffMountainFilm and BookFestival.
http://raisetheriver.org/
http://www.banffcentre.ca/mountainfestival/
Follow the Banff Centre:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheBanffCentre
Twitter: https://twitter.com/thebanffcentre
Website: https://banffcentre.ca

For six million years, the Colorado River ran its course from its soaring origins in the Rockies to a once-teeming two-million-acre delta, finally emptying 14 million acre-feet of fresh water into the Sea of Cortez. But now, the river does not reach the sea. Indeed, the Colorado River has not reached the sea since 1998 but ends rather in a cracked and desolate expanse of barren mud flats and abandoned boats — a "dry river cemetery," as Mr. McBride says in one of the clips of this video. A few videos put together for the MSc in Environmental Technology.

published:06 May 2013

views:2533

Planet Earth: Limited Collector's Edition available on Blu-ray and DVD 10/4 at http://bit.ly/pH4Qv4
Planet Earth: Special Edition available on Blu-ray and DVD 10/4 at http://bit.ly/nAUZjd
Planet Earth took the world by storm when it originally aired. It garnered uniformly glowing reviews, won four Emmy Awards, including Best Nonfiction Series and Best Cinematography, and its longevity on the best-seller list is legend. Now, with the addition of all new commentary and new bonus programs you can relive this incredible experience all over again! In this truly special, limited collector's edition, prepare to be overwhelmed again by the beauty and majesty of Planet Earth.

Known for its dramatic canyons and whitewater rapids, the Colorado is a vital source of water for agricultural and urban areas in the southwestern desert lands of North America. The river and its tributaries are controlled by an extensive system of dams, reservoirs, and aqueducts, which divert 90% of its water in the U.S. alone to furnish irrigation and municipal water supply for almost 40million people both inside and outside the watershed. The Colorado's large flow and steep gradient are used for generating hydroelectric power, and its major dams regulate peaking power demands in much of the Intermountain West. Intensive water consumption has dried the lower 100 miles (160km) of the river such that it has not consistently reached the sea since the 1960s.

The Grand Canyon is 277 miles (446km) long, up to 18 miles (29km) wide and attains a depth of over a mile (6,093 feet or 1,857 meters). Nearly two billion years of Earth's geological history have been exposed as the Colorado River and its tributaries cut their channels through layer after layer of rock while the Colorado Plateau was uplifted. While some aspects about the history of incision of the canyon are debated by geologists, several recent studies support the hypothesis that the Colorado River established its course through the area about 5 or 6 million years ago. Since that time, the Colorado River has driven the down-cutting of the tributaries and retreat of the cliffs, simultaneously deepening and widening the canyon.

River

A river is a natural flowing watercourse, usually freshwater, flowing towards an ocean, sea, lake or another river. In some cases a river flows into the ground and becomes dry at the end of its course without reaching another body of water. Small rivers can be referred to using names such as stream, creek, brook, rivulet, and rill. There are no official definitions for the generic term river as applied to geographic features, although in some countries or communities a stream is defined by its size. Many names for small rivers are specific to geographic location; examples are "run" in some parts of the United States, "burn" in Scotland and northeast England, and "beck" in northern England. Sometimes a river is defined as being larger than a creek, but not always: the language is vague.

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24:00

Chasing Rivers, Part 1: The Colorado | Nat Geo Live

Chasing Rivers, Part 1: The Colorado | Nat Geo Live

Chasing Rivers, Part 1: The Colorado | Nat Geo Live

National GeographicFreshwaterHeroPete McBride paddled and hiked the length of the Colorado River Delta, photographing and filming an unprecedented conservation success—the mighty river's triumphant, albeit temporary, return to the sea.
➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe
➡ Get More Nat GeoLive: http://bit.ly/MoreNatGeoLive
About Nat Geo Live (National Geographic Live):
Thought-provoking presentations by today's leading explorers, scientists, and photographers.
Get More National Geographic:
OfficialSite: http://bit.ly/NatGeoOfficialSite
Facebook: http://bit.ly/FBNatGeo
Twitter: http://bit.ly/NatGeoTwitter
Instagram: http://bit.ly/NatGeoInsta
About National Geographic:
National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their world-class scientists, photographers, journalists, and filmmakers, Nat Geo gets you closer to the stories that matter and past the edge of what's possible.
Upcoming Events at National Geographic Live!
http://events.nationalgeographic.com/events/
Learn About the Freshwater Initiative
http://environment.nationalgeographic.com/environment/freshwater/about-freshwater-initiative/
The National Geographic Live series brings thought-provoking presentations by today’s leading explorers, scientists, photographers, and performing artists right to you. Each presentation is filmed in front of a live audience at National Geographic headquarters in Washington, D.C. New clips air every Monday.
ChasingRivers, Part 1: The Colorado | Nat Geo Live
https://youtu.be/xt5uJrWW1gE
National Geographic
https://www.youtube.com/natgeo

3:36

Colorado River - I Am Red

Colorado River - I Am Red

Colorado River - I Am Red

The Colorado River is a lifeline in the desert, its water sustaining tens of millions of people in seven states, as well as endangered fish and wildlife. However, demand on the river's water now exceeds its supply, leaving the river so over-tapped that it no longer flows to the sea. (Video by Pete McBride. Flights by Lighthawk, Ecoflight.)
Learn more and be part of the solution: www.AmericanRivers.org/Colorado

21:33

Take a 1,450 mile journey along the Colorado River

Take a 1,450 mile journey along the Colorado River

Take a 1,450 mile journey along the Colorado River

The Colorado River is so much more than something we raft and fish in. Millions of people in the western U.S. drink water that comes from the river. Millions more use electricity generated by hydroelectric power plants along the rivers 1,450-mile course. Most of the produce on our table is grown using water from the river and its tributaries. When you think about it, the Colorado River is so much more than just a river, its a lifeline for the southwestern U.S. In the Denver7 special presentation Colorado River: Lifeline of the West, hosts LisaHidalgo and Eric Lupher share the story of a river that has shaped the landscape for millions of years but is now having itself reshaped by people trying to harness its power.

23:21

Inside the Grand Canyon: 6 days on Colorado River, Arizona in HD

Inside the Grand Canyon: 6 days on Colorado River, Arizona in HD

Inside the Grand Canyon: 6 days on Colorado River, Arizona in HD

6 day Rafting & Hiking trip on Colorado River in the Upper Grand Canyon - Lee's Ferry to Phantom Ranch. Major highlights: NorthCanyon, South Canyon, Vasey's Paradise, RedwallCavern, Bridge of Sigh, hike at mile 36 and hike at Eminence Camp, Saddle Canyon, Nankoweap, Little Colorado River, Carbon Creek/Lava Canyon hike, Tabernacle hike.
After river trip, on the 7th day we walked up to the South Rim (separate video from the Grand Canyon Arizona playlist shows that part of the trip).
Re-post of my 2010 video. The quality cannot match my recent 4K uploads, but the trip was so stunning and the memories so alive - I decided to re-post.
Recorded Sep 21-26 2010 in HD with Canon HV30.
Music:
Deuter - Koyasan - 05 - Sound ofInvisibleWatersAvailable here: https://amazon.com/dp/B00M24GGBO/
Broekhuis, Keller & Schonwalder - Bologna2000 - Part 3
Broekhuis, Keller & Schönwälder – Official Website:
http://bks-em.eu
Broekhuis, Keller & Schönwälder Label:
http://manikin.de
Broekhuis, Keller & Schönwälder music available at:
https://manikinrecords.bandcamp.com
Deuter - East of the Full Moon - 07 - EarthShadow
Available at: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00M24RZLY/
This video is licensed/shared under the Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0InternationalLicense - You can use short segments of the video (except for the music) for non-commercial purposes, given that you provide proper attribution to this YT channel.
--------------------------------------
About AmazingPlaces on Our Planet:
Immerse yourself in scenic beautiful places on our planet without the distraction of words.
New 4K video every Friday or every second Friday.
Subscribe: https://goo.gl/Aoym5p
Facebook: https://facebook.com/milosh9k
Twitter: https://twitter.com/milosh9k
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+milosh9k
Website: https://milosh9k.com
Movies On Map: https://goo.gl/LdNNqX
Watch More Amazing Places on Our Planet: All 4K Ultra HD Videos: https://youtube.com/watch?v=BRhj5sLA6EI&list=PLwJH-XOKXh0g2FJ-6J5JuAowQd7R9M1lP
US National Parks in 4K: https://youtube.com/watch?v=HLmOkDBfxv0&list=PLwJH-XOKXh0jaAoGxECimjQbnNl_rggZs
Canada in 4K: https://youtube.com/watch?v=LhfNrsEghkA&list=PLwJH-XOKXh0gJ-q0LHGYM3VYQ3IRysIgt
China in 4K: https://youtube.com/watch?v=OEbZ5Y-sxAo&list=PLwJH-XOKXh0hdrJrRbPxCxDNovIgzr44p
Southern Africa in 4K: https://youtube.com/watch?v=iywqpda7d8k&list=PLwJH-XOKXh0j3OtsfowK08I24v00oKaK0
Amazing Trails: https://youtube.com/watch?v=FiS4u98Scx8&list=PLwJH-XOKXh0j8j-HHjonOxmHStpNkHOgq
Indonesia in 4K: https://youtube.com/watch?v=BHqNWkkMzI0&list=PLwJH-XOKXh0jAWdrO-7QGu_qyG3JGRd_C
Iceland in 4K: https://youtube.com/watch?v=O7okOo1cBa0&list=PLwJH-XOKXh0hi961aTqDUET-cezH5cKSm
Best selection by year: https://youtube.com/watch?v=ICFQS_jpzFY&list=PLwJH-XOKXh0hqXey9O_PIBUX_L6DlvRL-

5:48

Bringing Back the Colorado River Delta - 2013 | The New York Times

Bringing Back the Colorado River Delta - 2013 | The New York Times

Bringing Back the Colorado River Delta - 2013 | The New York Times

A new agreement between Mexico and the United States called Minute 319 will ensure more water flows into the Colorado River delta in Mexico, helping to restore parts of the once fertile region.
Related article: http://nyti.ms/ZI94Hc
Please visit http://nyti.ms/13qMiXp in order to embed this video
Subscribe to the TimesVideo newsletter for free and get a handpicked selection of the best videos from The New York Times every week: http://bit.ly/timesvideonewsletter
Subscribe on YouTube: http://bit.ly/U8Ys7n
Watch more videos at: http://nytimes.com/video
---------------------------------------------------------------
Want more from The New York Times?
Twitter: https://twitter.com/nytvideo
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nytimes
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+nytimes/
Whether it's reporting on conflicts abroad and political divisions at home, or covering the latest style trends and scientific developments, New York Times video journalists provide a revealing and unforgettable view of the world. It's all the news that's fit to watch. On YouTube.
Bringing Back the Colorado River Delta - 2013
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheNewYorkTimes

2:13

Bringing the Colorado River Delta Back to Life After 16 Dry Years

Bringing the Colorado River Delta Back to Life After 16 Dry Years

Bringing the Colorado River Delta Back to Life After 16 Dry Years

In the spring of 2014, for the first time in 16 years, water was released into the dry bed of the Colorado River Delta, and it reached all the way to the Sea of Cortez. But it didn't last for long.
Pete McBride, river advocates, and scientists were there to document the natural wonder of this historic event, as well as the pure joy this brought to Mexican communities who live on the Colorado Delta. This film is proof that nature isn't gone, it’s simply waiting for us to give it a chance.
"Delta Dawn" won the best short film award at the 2014 BanffMountainFilm and BookFestival.
http://raisetheriver.org/
http://www.banffcentre.ca/mountainfestival/
Follow the Banff Centre:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheBanffCentre
Twitter: https://twitter.com/thebanffcentre
Website: https://banffcentre.ca

Hot Boats on the Colorado river- Needles 2007

Water resources increasingly strained - The Colorado River

For six million years, the Colorado River ran its course from its soaring origins in the Rockies to a once-teeming two-million-acre delta, finally emptying 14 million acre-feet of fresh water into the Sea of Cortez. But now, the river does not reach the sea. Indeed, the Colorado River has not reached the sea since 1998 but ends rather in a cracked and desolate expanse of barren mud flats and abandoned boats — a "dry river cemetery," as Mr. McBride says in one of the clips of this video. A few videos put together for the MSc in Environmental Technology.

1:53

Colorado River- BBC Planet Earth

Colorado River- BBC Planet Earth

Colorado River- BBC Planet Earth

Planet Earth: Limited Collector's Edition available on Blu-ray and DVD 10/4 at http://bit.ly/pH4Qv4
Planet Earth: Special Edition available on Blu-ray and DVD 10/4 at http://bit.ly/nAUZjd
Planet Earth took the world by storm when it originally aired. It garnered uniformly glowing reviews, won four Emmy Awards, including Best Nonfiction Series and Best Cinematography, and its longevity on the best-seller list is legend. Now, with the addition of all new commentary and new bonus programs you can relive this incredible experience all over again! In this truly special, limited collector's edition, prepare to be overwhelmed again by the beauty and majesty of Planet Earth.

The Colorado River Aqueduct

A three-minute video about one of the worlds engineering wonders, the Colorado River Aqueduct carries water across the desert, over mountains, through tunnels and underground pipes to cities and communities throughout Southern California.

3:22

Floating down the Little Colorado River

Floating down the Little Colorado River

Floating down the Little Colorado River

This summer, I took a 7 day 190 mile white water rafting adventure down the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon. I had one of the greatest times of my life! One of my favorite parts of the trip was being able to float down the breathtakingly beautiful sky blue Little Colorado River. Unforgettable!! I highly recommend you put this trip on your bucket list! Check out www.raftarizona.com

6:47

Shortage on the Colorado River

Shortage on the Colorado River

Shortage on the Colorado River

Watch this short film to learn more about the challenges a future Colorado River shortage will have on central and southern Arizona and how CAP is collaborating with the state and others to develop solutions.

Chasing Rivers, Part 1: The Colorado | Nat Geo Live

National GeographicFreshwaterHeroPete McBride paddled and hiked the length of the Colorado River Delta, photographing and filming an unprecedented conservation success—the mighty river's triumphant, albeit temporary, return to the sea.
➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe
➡ Get More Nat GeoLive: http://bit.ly/MoreNatGeoLive
About Nat Geo Live (National Geographic Live):
Thought-provoking presentations by today's leading explorers, scientists, and photographers.
Get More National Geographic:
OfficialSite: http://bit.ly/NatGeoOfficialSite
Facebook: http://bit.ly/FBNatGeo
Twitter: http://bit.ly/NatGeoTwitter
Instagram: http://bit.ly/NatGeoInsta
About National Geographic:
National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their...

published: 10 Nov 2014

Colorado River - I Am Red

The Colorado River is a lifeline in the desert, its water sustaining tens of millions of people in seven states, as well as endangered fish and wildlife. However, demand on the river's water now exceeds its supply, leaving the river so over-tapped that it no longer flows to the sea. (Video by Pete McBride. Flights by Lighthawk, Ecoflight.)
Learn more and be part of the solution: www.AmericanRivers.org/Colorado

published: 17 Apr 2013

Take a 1,450 mile journey along the Colorado River

The Colorado River is so much more than something we raft and fish in. Millions of people in the western U.S. drink water that comes from the river. Millions more use electricity generated by hydroelectric power plants along the rivers 1,450-mile course. Most of the produce on our table is grown using water from the river and its tributaries. When you think about it, the Colorado River is so much more than just a river, its a lifeline for the southwestern U.S. In the Denver7 special presentation Colorado River: Lifeline of the West, hosts LisaHidalgo and Eric Lupher share the story of a river that has shaped the landscape for millions of years but is now having itself reshaped by people trying to harness its power.

Bringing Back the Colorado River Delta - 2013 | The New York Times

A new agreement between Mexico and the United States called Minute 319 will ensure more water flows into the Colorado River delta in Mexico, helping to restore parts of the once fertile region.
Related article: http://nyti.ms/ZI94Hc
Please visit http://nyti.ms/13qMiXp in order to embed this video
Subscribe to the TimesVideo newsletter for free and get a handpicked selection of the best videos from The New York Times every week: http://bit.ly/timesvideonewsletter
Subscribe on YouTube: http://bit.ly/U8Ys7n
Watch more videos at: http://nytimes.com/video
---------------------------------------------------------------
Want more from The New York Times?
Twitter: https://twitter.com/nytvideo
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nytimes
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+nytimes/
Whether...

published: 22 Apr 2013

Bringing the Colorado River Delta Back to Life After 16 Dry Years

In the spring of 2014, for the first time in 16 years, water was released into the dry bed of the Colorado River Delta, and it reached all the way to the Sea of Cortez. But it didn't last for long.
Pete McBride, river advocates, and scientists were there to document the natural wonder of this historic event, as well as the pure joy this brought to Mexican communities who live on the Colorado Delta. This film is proof that nature isn't gone, it’s simply waiting for us to give it a chance.
"Delta Dawn" won the best short film award at the 2014 BanffMountainFilm and BookFestival.
http://raisetheriver.org/
http://www.banffcentre.ca/mountainfestival/
Follow the Banff Centre:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheBanffCentre
Twitter: https://twitter.com/thebanffcentre
Website: https://...

published: 27 Nov 2014

Hot Boats on the Colorado river- Needles 2007

Water resources increasingly strained - The Colorado River

For six million years, the Colorado River ran its course from its soaring origins in the Rockies to a once-teeming two-million-acre delta, finally emptying 14 million acre-feet of fresh water into the Sea of Cortez. But now, the river does not reach the sea. Indeed, the Colorado River has not reached the sea since 1998 but ends rather in a cracked and desolate expanse of barren mud flats and abandoned boats — a "dry river cemetery," as Mr. McBride says in one of the clips of this video. A few videos put together for the MSc in Environmental Technology.

published: 06 May 2013

Colorado River- BBC Planet Earth

Planet Earth: Limited Collector's Edition available on Blu-ray and DVD 10/4 at http://bit.ly/pH4Qv4
Planet Earth: Special Edition available on Blu-ray and DVD 10/4 at http://bit.ly/nAUZjd
Planet Earth took the world by storm when it originally aired. It garnered uniformly glowing reviews, won four Emmy Awards, including Best Nonfiction Series and Best Cinematography, and its longevity on the best-seller list is legend. Now, with the addition of all new commentary and new bonus programs you can relive this incredible experience all over again! In this truly special, limited collector's edition, prepare to be overwhelmed again by the beauty and majesty of Planet Earth.

The Colorado River Aqueduct

A three-minute video about one of the worlds engineering wonders, the Colorado River Aqueduct carries water across the desert, over mountains, through tunnels and underground pipes to cities and communities throughout Southern California.

published: 01 Feb 2013

Floating down the Little Colorado River

This summer, I took a 7 day 190 mile white water rafting adventure down the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon. I had one of the greatest times of my life! One of my favorite parts of the trip was being able to float down the breathtakingly beautiful sky blue Little Colorado River. Unforgettable!! I highly recommend you put this trip on your bucket list! Check out www.raftarizona.com

published: 07 Jul 2013

Shortage on the Colorado River

Watch this short film to learn more about the challenges a future Colorado River shortage will have on central and southern Arizona and how CAP is collaborating with the state and others to develop solutions.

National GeographicFreshwaterHeroPete McBride paddled and hiked the length of the Colorado River Delta, photographing and filming an unprecedented conservation success—the mighty river's triumphant, albeit temporary, return to the sea.
➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe
➡ Get More Nat GeoLive: http://bit.ly/MoreNatGeoLive
About Nat Geo Live (National Geographic Live):
Thought-provoking presentations by today's leading explorers, scientists, and photographers.
Get More National Geographic:
OfficialSite: http://bit.ly/NatGeoOfficialSite
Facebook: http://bit.ly/FBNatGeo
Twitter: http://bit.ly/NatGeoTwitter
Instagram: http://bit.ly/NatGeoInsta
About National Geographic:
National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their world-class scientists, photographers, journalists, and filmmakers, Nat Geo gets you closer to the stories that matter and past the edge of what's possible.
Upcoming Events at National Geographic Live!
http://events.nationalgeographic.com/events/
Learn About the Freshwater Initiative
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National GeographicFreshwaterHeroPete McBride paddled and hiked the length of the Colorado River Delta, photographing and filming an unprecedented conservation success—the mighty river's triumphant, albeit temporary, return to the sea.
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ChasingRivers, Part 1: The Colorado | Nat Geo Live
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Colorado River - I Am Red

The Colorado River is a lifeline in the desert, its water sustaining tens of millions of people in seven states, as well as endangered fish and wildlife. Howeve...

The Colorado River is a lifeline in the desert, its water sustaining tens of millions of people in seven states, as well as endangered fish and wildlife. However, demand on the river's water now exceeds its supply, leaving the river so over-tapped that it no longer flows to the sea. (Video by Pete McBride. Flights by Lighthawk, Ecoflight.)
Learn more and be part of the solution: www.AmericanRivers.org/Colorado

The Colorado River is a lifeline in the desert, its water sustaining tens of millions of people in seven states, as well as endangered fish and wildlife. However, demand on the river's water now exceeds its supply, leaving the river so over-tapped that it no longer flows to the sea. (Video by Pete McBride. Flights by Lighthawk, Ecoflight.)
Learn more and be part of the solution: www.AmericanRivers.org/Colorado

The Colorado River is so much more than something we raft and fish in. Millions of people in the western U.S. drink water that comes from the river. Millions more use electricity generated by hydroelectric power plants along the rivers 1,450-mile course. Most of the produce on our table is grown using water from the river and its tributaries. When you think about it, the Colorado River is so much more than just a river, its a lifeline for the southwestern U.S. In the Denver7 special presentation Colorado River: Lifeline of the West, hosts LisaHidalgo and Eric Lupher share the story of a river that has shaped the landscape for millions of years but is now having itself reshaped by people trying to harness its power.

The Colorado River is so much more than something we raft and fish in. Millions of people in the western U.S. drink water that comes from the river. Millions more use electricity generated by hydroelectric power plants along the rivers 1,450-mile course. Most of the produce on our table is grown using water from the river and its tributaries. When you think about it, the Colorado River is so much more than just a river, its a lifeline for the southwestern U.S. In the Denver7 special presentation Colorado River: Lifeline of the West, hosts LisaHidalgo and Eric Lupher share the story of a river that has shaped the landscape for millions of years but is now having itself reshaped by people trying to harness its power.

A new agreement between Mexico and the United States called Minute 319 will ensure more water flows into the Colorado River delta in Mexico, helping to restore parts of the once fertile region.
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Bringing Back the Colorado River Delta - 2013
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A new agreement between Mexico and the United States called Minute 319 will ensure more water flows into the Colorado River delta in Mexico, helping to restore parts of the once fertile region.
Related article: http://nyti.ms/ZI94Hc
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Bringing Back the Colorado River Delta - 2013
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Bringing the Colorado River Delta Back to Life After 16 Dry Years

In the spring of 2014, for the first time in 16 years, water was released into the dry bed of the Colorado River Delta, and it reached all the way to the Sea of...

In the spring of 2014, for the first time in 16 years, water was released into the dry bed of the Colorado River Delta, and it reached all the way to the Sea of Cortez. But it didn't last for long.
Pete McBride, river advocates, and scientists were there to document the natural wonder of this historic event, as well as the pure joy this brought to Mexican communities who live on the Colorado Delta. This film is proof that nature isn't gone, it’s simply waiting for us to give it a chance.
"Delta Dawn" won the best short film award at the 2014 BanffMountainFilm and BookFestival.
http://raisetheriver.org/
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In the spring of 2014, for the first time in 16 years, water was released into the dry bed of the Colorado River Delta, and it reached all the way to the Sea of Cortez. But it didn't last for long.
Pete McBride, river advocates, and scientists were there to document the natural wonder of this historic event, as well as the pure joy this brought to Mexican communities who live on the Colorado Delta. This film is proof that nature isn't gone, it’s simply waiting for us to give it a chance.
"Delta Dawn" won the best short film award at the 2014 BanffMountainFilm and BookFestival.
http://raisetheriver.org/
http://www.banffcentre.ca/mountainfestival/
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Water resources increasingly strained - The Colorado River

For six million years, the Colorado River ran its course from its soaring origins in the Rockies to a once-teeming two-million-acre delta, finally emptying 14 m...

For six million years, the Colorado River ran its course from its soaring origins in the Rockies to a once-teeming two-million-acre delta, finally emptying 14 million acre-feet of fresh water into the Sea of Cortez. But now, the river does not reach the sea. Indeed, the Colorado River has not reached the sea since 1998 but ends rather in a cracked and desolate expanse of barren mud flats and abandoned boats — a "dry river cemetery," as Mr. McBride says in one of the clips of this video. A few videos put together for the MSc in Environmental Technology.

For six million years, the Colorado River ran its course from its soaring origins in the Rockies to a once-teeming two-million-acre delta, finally emptying 14 million acre-feet of fresh water into the Sea of Cortez. But now, the river does not reach the sea. Indeed, the Colorado River has not reached the sea since 1998 but ends rather in a cracked and desolate expanse of barren mud flats and abandoned boats — a "dry river cemetery," as Mr. McBride says in one of the clips of this video. A few videos put together for the MSc in Environmental Technology.

Planet Earth: Limited Collector's Edition available on Blu-ray and DVD 10/4 at http://bit.ly/pH4Qv4
Planet Earth: Special Edition available on Blu-ray and DVD 10/4 at http://bit.ly/nAUZjd
Planet Earth took the world by storm when it originally aired. It garnered uniformly glowing reviews, won four Emmy Awards, including Best Nonfiction Series and Best Cinematography, and its longevity on the best-seller list is legend. Now, with the addition of all new commentary and new bonus programs you can relive this incredible experience all over again! In this truly special, limited collector's edition, prepare to be overwhelmed again by the beauty and majesty of Planet Earth.

Planet Earth: Limited Collector's Edition available on Blu-ray and DVD 10/4 at http://bit.ly/pH4Qv4
Planet Earth: Special Edition available on Blu-ray and DVD 10/4 at http://bit.ly/nAUZjd
Planet Earth took the world by storm when it originally aired. It garnered uniformly glowing reviews, won four Emmy Awards, including Best Nonfiction Series and Best Cinematography, and its longevity on the best-seller list is legend. Now, with the addition of all new commentary and new bonus programs you can relive this incredible experience all over again! In this truly special, limited collector's edition, prepare to be overwhelmed again by the beauty and majesty of Planet Earth.

The Colorado River Aqueduct

A three-minute video about one of the worlds engineering wonders, the Colorado River Aqueduct carries water across the desert, over mountains, through tunnels a...

A three-minute video about one of the worlds engineering wonders, the Colorado River Aqueduct carries water across the desert, over mountains, through tunnels and underground pipes to cities and communities throughout Southern California.

A three-minute video about one of the worlds engineering wonders, the Colorado River Aqueduct carries water across the desert, over mountains, through tunnels and underground pipes to cities and communities throughout Southern California.

Floating down the Little Colorado River

This summer, I took a 7 day 190 mile white water rafting adventure down the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon. I had one of the greatest times of my life! One ...

This summer, I took a 7 day 190 mile white water rafting adventure down the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon. I had one of the greatest times of my life! One of my favorite parts of the trip was being able to float down the breathtakingly beautiful sky blue Little Colorado River. Unforgettable!! I highly recommend you put this trip on your bucket list! Check out www.raftarizona.com

This summer, I took a 7 day 190 mile white water rafting adventure down the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon. I had one of the greatest times of my life! One of my favorite parts of the trip was being able to float down the breathtakingly beautiful sky blue Little Colorado River. Unforgettable!! I highly recommend you put this trip on your bucket list! Check out www.raftarizona.com

Shortage on the Colorado River

Watch this short film to learn more about the challenges a future Colorado River shortage will have on central and southern Arizona and how CAP is collaborating...

Watch this short film to learn more about the challenges a future Colorado River shortage will have on central and southern Arizona and how CAP is collaborating with the state and others to develop solutions.

Watch this short film to learn more about the challenges a future Colorado River shortage will have on central and southern Arizona and how CAP is collaborating with the state and others to develop solutions.

Grand Canyon Vacation Travel Video Guide

Travel video about destination Grand Canyon in the United States of America.
Formed at the point where the Colorado River breaks through the mountains of the American West, the 1800 metre deep Grand Canyon is endowed with a wealth of natural forms and shapes which have made it inevitable that it would have a colourful and important role to play within the myths of creation of the region’s indigenous inhabitants.The Native American Indians chose it as their ‘Happy Hunting Grounds’ in which man’s soul lives on after death. Myth and legend tell of how a giant buffalo ripped open the earth with its horns forcing it upwards toward heaven. This is the kingdom of ‘Coyote’, creator of the world, who is answerable only to the God Manitou. The Grand Canyon is fact, fiction, legend and myth…a geograp...

Grand Canyon (USA) Vacation Travel Video Guide

Travel video about destination Grand Canyon in The USA.
There are few places on Earth that highlight the power of nature or are as impressive as the truly awesome Grand Canyon. Millions of years ago erosion and the relentless power of the Colorado River created its magnificent landscape and even today the river continues to force its way through the rock, sand and mud of Canyon. The Canyon extends for four hundred kilometres and its width ranges from between six and thirty kilometres. In 1919 the American government designated the region as a protected area. The first to discover the canyons were the AnasaziIndians who settled in the area around a thousand years ago. They hunted for food and also cultivated corn, pumpkins and beans in many of the neighbouring valleys. Even today a small ...

published: 29 Apr 2017

Grand Canyon Park Travel Guide

Travel video about nature park Grand CanyonPark in The USA.
The Grand CanyonNational Park is the most beautiful and well-known nature reserve in the USA, its 5000 square kilometres covering more than four different climatic zones and rising to 2200 metres above sea level.The Grand Canyon is also Indian Territory, the Navajo, Hopi and Havasuapi Indians still inhabit this region. Neatly piled one above the other, the Grand Canyon feautes twelve geological layers of various time periods. Its time-span ranges from the fossil rich 250 million year old limestone of the Kaibab Plateau to the almost two million year old Vishu slate at the bottom of the ravine. The Colorado River created this natural masterpiece in less than ten million years with severe heat and extreme cold eroding the rock, fo...

published: 14 Aug 2013

Take a 1,450 mile journey along the Colorado River

The Colorado River is so much more than something we raft and fish in. Millions of people in the western U.S. drink water that comes from the river. Millions more use electricity generated by hydroelectric power plants along the rivers 1,450-mile course. Most of the produce on our table is grown using water from the river and its tributaries. When you think about it, the Colorado River is so much more than just a river, its a lifeline for the southwestern U.S. In the Denver7 special presentation Colorado River: Lifeline of the West, hosts LisaHidalgo and Eric Lupher share the story of a river that has shaped the landscape for millions of years but is now having itself reshaped by people trying to harness its power.

FLY FISHING THE COLORADO RIVER | LEES FERRY (EP 101)

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The #1 question we get is “what is your favorite place” and our answer is always the same. It’s impossible to compare the beauty of two extremes. Lees Ferry is an extreme. This destination is a site in Marble Canyon on the Colorado River separating Arizona from Utah. It will feel like you’re at the bottom of the Grand Canyon and in a way you are. To make this destination even more magical, it’s directly below the Glen Canyon damn that is breathtaking in its accomplishment.
Horse ShoeBend is a highly visited destination nea...

Black Canyon Raft Adventure - Hoover Dam & Colorado River

www.blackcanyonadventures.com
Black Canyon Rafting Adventure below Hoover Dam on the Colorado River is a half-day trip for the whole family. It starts at the base of Hoover Dam in Nevada and ends at Willow Beach Marina on Lake Mohave, Arizona.
Located a short distance from the Las Vegas Strip in Lake Mead National Recreation Area, Black Canyon is truly one of those unique places to visit. Trips depart from the Hacienda Hotel near Hoover Dam each day.
During your visit, be sure to venture out on the newest attraction at Hoover Dam - the new bridge over the Colorado River and Black Canyon. With views of 1,000 feet straight down, you'll see the Dam and Canyon like you've never them seen before.
Filmed in high definition this video featurette is a bonus feature on Finley-Holiday Films' C...

published: 23 May 2014

Colorado River Rafting

Colorado RiverDiscovery offers the most fantastic one day rafting tours anywhere on the mighty Colorado River. We provide tours near Glen Canyon Dam, half day raft trips as well as full day river rafting tours on motor rafts that are perfect for the entire family (kids ages 4 and up). We even offer full day rowing trips for those looking for a more relaxed adventure to experience the Colorado River at a slower pace.
As you float on one of the most dramatic stretches of river in the western United States, your experienced guide will tell the story of the area’s soaring sandstone cliffs, crystal blue-green waters, abundant wildlife, exploration by Major JohnWesley Powell and others, and the river’s modern role in the Southwest’s water and power delivery system.

Travel video about destination Wonderland of Nature, North America.
Early in the morning, mist cloaks the deep valleys of the Grand Canyon. Soon it clears to reveal a huge, magical world. Millions of years ago, erosion and the relentless power of the Colorado River created this magnificent landscape and even today the river continues to force its way through the rock, sand and mud of the Grand Canyon. The first to discover the canyons were the AnasaziIndians who settled in the region around a thousand years ago. They hunted for food and also cultivated corn, pumpkins and beans in many of the neighbouring valleys and even today a small Indian tribe lives in a nearby canyon. For many years Monument Valley and its distinctive mesas in the northern part of Arizona have become one of the m...

Ask a Grand Canyon River Guide!

Top 3 Things to do in Page, Arizona (Lake Powell)

Page, Arizona has many exciting activities. Among them are Horseshoe Bend, Antelope Canyon and rafting trips down the Colorado River. They are all extremely fun and highly recommended.
The hike to Horseshoe Bend is an easy 3/4 of a mile and the view is amazing. You can see the Colorado River 1,000 feet below you.
Antelope Canyon is just outside of Page on Navajo land. You can take one of the guided tours through either Upper or Lower Antelope Canyon. What makes Antelope Canyon so special is the "flowing" shape of the walls, and the incredible way the beams of light radiate down from the openings of the canyon.
The Colorado RiverFloatTrip is an extremely fun and relaxing boat ride down the Colorado River. The water is very calm and the view up the canyon walls is amazing. They take yo...

Canyonlands (USA) Vacation Travel Video Guide

Travel video about destination Canyonlands in The USA.
Canyonlands is a wild expanse of rock carved out by water and gravity that has created a large number of bizarre formations located in the heart of the Colorado Plateau. Native American Indians, cowboys, river explorers and uranium miners were once the few who dared to traverse this untamed wilderness in South EastUtah. Established as a national park in 1964, the red terrain of Canyonlands covers five hundred and twenty-seven square miles between the Colorado River and the Green River.Canyonlands contains three distinct regions. To the north lies the Island in the Sky, to the west, The Maze, and to the east, The Needles. The height difference between the rivers and the valleys can be as much as fifteen hundred metres thus creating a...

published: 24 Mar 2017

Packing For The Grand Canyon - Colorado River Rafting Packing Guide

Here's how to pack for the Grand Canyon: If you're planning on rafting the Grand Canyon then you'll want to know how to pack for it. There are some better practices to follow when packing for a white water Colorado River rafting trip.
Here at Grand Canyon Expeditions we want you to have the best Colorado River rafting experience possible, and that takes some forethought on your end to make certain you bring the correct clothes and gear, and that you pack them correctly.
Learn more about GCEX (Grand Canyon Expeditions) here: https://www.gcex.com/
We provide you 3 separate items to help you pack for the Grand Canyon. Your clothing bag, or your brown bag that you'll store all of your clothes in. This bag will get tied off in the morning and won't be accessible throughout the day. Your sle...

California travel expert VeronicaHill of http://www.CaliforniaTravelExpert.com tours Lake Havasu Az, London Bridge, Topock and Needles in this Colorado River episode of "California Travel Tips."
Located on the border of California and Arizona, about 300 miles from Los Angeles, Lake Havasu sits along the Colorado River with Parker Dam to the south and Davis Dam to the north.
Lake Havasu hotels include the chic new Lake Havasu hotel Heat and the Lake Havasu London Bridge Resort, home to the popular nightclub, Kokomos. Colorado River camping is available at The Islander Resort in Lake Havasu and Crazy Horse Campground. Havasu Palms and Black MeadowLanding are popular down near Parker Dam, and Palms River Resort is a good choice near Needles. In 2009, PirateCove Resort and the Naked Pirate Beach Bar opened in Needles to the delight of Lake Havasu party people.
Along the river, there are a few gas stations for boaters. Topock Marina is one of the most popular stops, and its bar and grill serves up great burgers, ribs and other American barbecue fare. If you're looking for another great place to cool off with a cold drink, the Naked Turtle Beach Bar at Nautical Inn Resort in Lake Havasu always has a party going on.
Speaking of parties, while you're here, don't miss Spring Break Lake Havasu hot spots like Copper Canyon, popular for cliff diving; Steamboat Cove, popular for Lake Havasu boat parties, and the famous sandbar in Topock Gorge.
Topock Gorge Havasu National Wildlife Refuge, home to Indian petroglyphs and bighorn sheep, is also a popular spot for birding, Colorado River rafting and kayak or canoe Colorado River trips. The Colorado River water current averages 3 mph here, and it's a lovely place to beach your boat and spend the day.
When planning your Lake Havasu vacation, remember that Lake Havasu weather averages about 110-119 F during the summer, and up to 100 F at night. Be sure to pack plenty of water, sunblock and food when going out on the boat.
For more information about Lake Havasu and the Colorado River, or to see more California travel videos, tips and advice, log on to CaliforniaTravelExpert.com SUBSCRIBE! http://tinyurl.com/p2fveuj
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California travel expert VeronicaHill of http://www.CaliforniaTravelExpert.com tours Lake Havasu Az, London Bridge, Topock and Needles in this Colorado River episode of "California Travel Tips."
Located on the border of California and Arizona, about 300 miles from Los Angeles, Lake Havasu sits along the Colorado River with Parker Dam to the south and Davis Dam to the north.
Lake Havasu hotels include the chic new Lake Havasu hotel Heat and the Lake Havasu London Bridge Resort, home to the popular nightclub, Kokomos. Colorado River camping is available at The Islander Resort in Lake Havasu and Crazy Horse Campground. Havasu Palms and Black MeadowLanding are popular down near Parker Dam, and Palms River Resort is a good choice near Needles. In 2009, PirateCove Resort and the Naked Pirate Beach Bar opened in Needles to the delight of Lake Havasu party people.
Along the river, there are a few gas stations for boaters. Topock Marina is one of the most popular stops, and its bar and grill serves up great burgers, ribs and other American barbecue fare. If you're looking for another great place to cool off with a cold drink, the Naked Turtle Beach Bar at Nautical Inn Resort in Lake Havasu always has a party going on.
Speaking of parties, while you're here, don't miss Spring Break Lake Havasu hot spots like Copper Canyon, popular for cliff diving; Steamboat Cove, popular for Lake Havasu boat parties, and the famous sandbar in Topock Gorge.
Topock Gorge Havasu National Wildlife Refuge, home to Indian petroglyphs and bighorn sheep, is also a popular spot for birding, Colorado River rafting and kayak or canoe Colorado River trips. The Colorado River water current averages 3 mph here, and it's a lovely place to beach your boat and spend the day.
When planning your Lake Havasu vacation, remember that Lake Havasu weather averages about 110-119 F during the summer, and up to 100 F at night. Be sure to pack plenty of water, sunblock and food when going out on the boat.
For more information about Lake Havasu and the Colorado River, or to see more California travel videos, tips and advice, log on to CaliforniaTravelExpert.com SUBSCRIBE! http://tinyurl.com/p2fveuj
LIKE ME ON FACEBOOK http://tinyurl.com/nqx9osq
CIRCLE ME ON GOOGLEPLUS http://tinyurl.com/odkmbqk
FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER https://twitter.com/Californiatips
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Yosemite Travel Essentials App:
ITUNES: https://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewSoftware?id=606694986&mt=8
DISNEYLAND INSIDER'S TRAVEL GUIDE
ITUNES: https://itunes.apple.com/ua/app/disneyland-insiders-travel/id528739310?mt=8
GOOGLE PLAY: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.sutromedia.android.guide.disney.guide&hl=en

Travel video about destination Grand Canyon in the United States of America.
Formed at the point where the Colorado River breaks through the mountains of the American West, the 1800 metre deep Grand Canyon is endowed with a wealth of natural forms and shapes which have made it inevitable that it would have a colourful and important role to play within the myths of creation of the region’s indigenous inhabitants.The Native American Indians chose it as their ‘Happy Hunting Grounds’ in which man’s soul lives on after death. Myth and legend tell of how a giant buffalo ripped open the earth with its horns forcing it upwards toward heaven. This is the kingdom of ‘Coyote’, creator of the world, who is answerable only to the God Manitou. The Grand Canyon is fact, fiction, legend and myth…a geographical wonder of the worlds of both fantasy and reality.

Travel video about destination Grand Canyon in the United States of America.
Formed at the point where the Colorado River breaks through the mountains of the American West, the 1800 metre deep Grand Canyon is endowed with a wealth of natural forms and shapes which have made it inevitable that it would have a colourful and important role to play within the myths of creation of the region’s indigenous inhabitants.The Native American Indians chose it as their ‘Happy Hunting Grounds’ in which man’s soul lives on after death. Myth and legend tell of how a giant buffalo ripped open the earth with its horns forcing it upwards toward heaven. This is the kingdom of ‘Coyote’, creator of the world, who is answerable only to the God Manitou. The Grand Canyon is fact, fiction, legend and myth…a geographical wonder of the worlds of both fantasy and reality.

Travel video about destination Grand Canyon in The USA.
There are few places on Earth that highlight the power of nature or are as impressive as the truly awesome Grand Canyon. Millions of years ago erosion and the relentless power of the Colorado River created its magnificent landscape and even today the river continues to force its way through the rock, sand and mud of Canyon. The Canyon extends for four hundred kilometres and its width ranges from between six and thirty kilometres. In 1919 the American government designated the region as a protected area. The first to discover the canyons were the AnasaziIndians who settled in the area around a thousand years ago. They hunted for food and also cultivated corn, pumpkins and beans in many of the neighbouring valleys. Even today a small Indian tribe lives in a nearby canyon. Words alone cannot describe the incredible landscape with its ever-changing colours and fascinating rock walls as the final rays of the setting sun disappear below the horizon until darkness falls in the majestic world of the Grand Canyon.

Travel video about destination Grand Canyon in The USA.
There are few places on Earth that highlight the power of nature or are as impressive as the truly awesome Grand Canyon. Millions of years ago erosion and the relentless power of the Colorado River created its magnificent landscape and even today the river continues to force its way through the rock, sand and mud of Canyon. The Canyon extends for four hundred kilometres and its width ranges from between six and thirty kilometres. In 1919 the American government designated the region as a protected area. The first to discover the canyons were the AnasaziIndians who settled in the area around a thousand years ago. They hunted for food and also cultivated corn, pumpkins and beans in many of the neighbouring valleys. Even today a small Indian tribe lives in a nearby canyon. Words alone cannot describe the incredible landscape with its ever-changing colours and fascinating rock walls as the final rays of the setting sun disappear below the horizon until darkness falls in the majestic world of the Grand Canyon.

Travel video about nature park Grand CanyonPark in The USA.
The Grand CanyonNational Park is the most beautiful and well-known nature reserve in the USA, its 5000 square kilometres covering more than four different climatic zones and rising to 2200 metres above sea level.The Grand Canyon is also Indian Territory, the Navajo, Hopi and Havasuapi Indians still inhabit this region. Neatly piled one above the other, the Grand Canyon feautes twelve geological layers of various time periods. Its time-span ranges from the fossil rich 250 million year old limestone of the Kaibab Plateau to the almost two million year old Vishu slate at the bottom of the ravine. The Colorado River created this natural masterpiece in less than ten million years with severe heat and extreme cold eroding the rock, followed by rainfall that drove it down into a mighty river. Up to 1600 metres deep and averaging 16 kilometres wide, the incredible dimensions of this huge abyss are difficult to comprehend, the descent into the canyon being like a journey into the Earth’s distant past. The rays of the sun make the geological strata appear brown from above and green and blue from below. The cream-coloured strata in the upper parts of the valley walls contain fossils of sponges, corals, snails and crustaceans. The beige-coloured sandstone contains fish skeletons and in the purple limestone there are the impressions of water lilies and primitive crustaceans, with green slate revealing traces of mussels and worms. At the bottom of the canyon there are no further signs of life, only dark slate that is nearly two billion years old, interspersed with grainy pink granite. There is almost nowhere else in the world where the layman is provided with such a rich and comprehensive insight to the history of the formation of the Earth’s geological layers created during the course of the past two billion years.

Travel video about nature park Grand CanyonPark in The USA.
The Grand CanyonNational Park is the most beautiful and well-known nature reserve in the USA, its 5000 square kilometres covering more than four different climatic zones and rising to 2200 metres above sea level.The Grand Canyon is also Indian Territory, the Navajo, Hopi and Havasuapi Indians still inhabit this region. Neatly piled one above the other, the Grand Canyon feautes twelve geological layers of various time periods. Its time-span ranges from the fossil rich 250 million year old limestone of the Kaibab Plateau to the almost two million year old Vishu slate at the bottom of the ravine. The Colorado River created this natural masterpiece in less than ten million years with severe heat and extreme cold eroding the rock, followed by rainfall that drove it down into a mighty river. Up to 1600 metres deep and averaging 16 kilometres wide, the incredible dimensions of this huge abyss are difficult to comprehend, the descent into the canyon being like a journey into the Earth’s distant past. The rays of the sun make the geological strata appear brown from above and green and blue from below. The cream-coloured strata in the upper parts of the valley walls contain fossils of sponges, corals, snails and crustaceans. The beige-coloured sandstone contains fish skeletons and in the purple limestone there are the impressions of water lilies and primitive crustaceans, with green slate revealing traces of mussels and worms. At the bottom of the canyon there are no further signs of life, only dark slate that is nearly two billion years old, interspersed with grainy pink granite. There is almost nowhere else in the world where the layman is provided with such a rich and comprehensive insight to the history of the formation of the Earth’s geological layers created during the course of the past two billion years.

The Colorado River is so much more than something we raft and fish in. Millions of people in the western U.S. drink water that comes from the river. Millions more use electricity generated by hydroelectric power plants along the rivers 1,450-mile course. Most of the produce on our table is grown using water from the river and its tributaries. When you think about it, the Colorado River is so much more than just a river, its a lifeline for the southwestern U.S. In the Denver7 special presentation Colorado River: Lifeline of the West, hosts LisaHidalgo and Eric Lupher share the story of a river that has shaped the landscape for millions of years but is now having itself reshaped by people trying to harness its power.

The Colorado River is so much more than something we raft and fish in. Millions of people in the western U.S. drink water that comes from the river. Millions more use electricity generated by hydroelectric power plants along the rivers 1,450-mile course. Most of the produce on our table is grown using water from the river and its tributaries. When you think about it, the Colorado River is so much more than just a river, its a lifeline for the southwestern U.S. In the Denver7 special presentation Colorado River: Lifeline of the West, hosts LisaHidalgo and Eric Lupher share the story of a river that has shaped the landscape for millions of years but is now having itself reshaped by people trying to harness its power.

Denver, Colorado Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions

http://bookinghunter.com
Denver is the largest city and the capital of the U.S. state of Colorado. Denver is also the second most populous county in Colorado a...

http://bookinghunter.com
Denver is the largest city and the capital of the U.S. state of Colorado. Denver is also the second most populous county in Colorado after El Paso County. Denver is a consolidated city and county located in the South Platte RiverValley on the western edge of the High Plains just east of the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains.
The most important places to visit in Denver are: Rocky Mountains (located close to Denver, Rocky Mountains are one of the great mountain ranges of this planet offering an immersive experience with nature), The ColoradoState Capitol Building (a highlight of the Denver skyline, it looks like the US Capitol Building. Its shining gold dome commemorates the Colorado gold rush), Denver CityHall (this beautiful city and county building was constructed in 1932. It is known for its grand display of lights during the Christmas season), Garden of the Gods (step outside the city and soak in this fascinating place. Massive rocks and unusual formations are sure to mesmerize you), Downtown (called the mile high city because of its closeness to Rocky Mountains, Denver downtown is a bustling commerce and cultural metropolis) and many more.
This video offers a lot of tips to help you plan the perfect vacation. If you want to save time and money, the most important Denver travel tip is to compare prices before booking a hotel room or a flight. You can do this for free on http://bookinghunter.com, a site that searches through hundreds of other travel websites in real time for the best travel deals available.

http://bookinghunter.com
Denver is the largest city and the capital of the U.S. state of Colorado. Denver is also the second most populous county in Colorado after El Paso County. Denver is a consolidated city and county located in the South Platte RiverValley on the western edge of the High Plains just east of the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains.
The most important places to visit in Denver are: Rocky Mountains (located close to Denver, Rocky Mountains are one of the great mountain ranges of this planet offering an immersive experience with nature), The ColoradoState Capitol Building (a highlight of the Denver skyline, it looks like the US Capitol Building. Its shining gold dome commemorates the Colorado gold rush), Denver CityHall (this beautiful city and county building was constructed in 1932. It is known for its grand display of lights during the Christmas season), Garden of the Gods (step outside the city and soak in this fascinating place. Massive rocks and unusual formations are sure to mesmerize you), Downtown (called the mile high city because of its closeness to Rocky Mountains, Denver downtown is a bustling commerce and cultural metropolis) and many more.
This video offers a lot of tips to help you plan the perfect vacation. If you want to save time and money, the most important Denver travel tip is to compare prices before booking a hotel room or a flight. You can do this for free on http://bookinghunter.com, a site that searches through hundreds of other travel websites in real time for the best travel deals available.

FLY FISHING THE COLORADO RIVER | LEES FERRY (EP 101)

We learned the expensive way... wait for a need until you buy. Here are all our favorite RV products ✅https://www.amazon.com/shop/keepyourdaydream
*This is a sm...

We learned the expensive way... wait for a need until you buy. Here are all our favorite RV products ✅https://www.amazon.com/shop/keepyourdaydream
*This is a small way to help keep our channel going that doesn’t cost you any more money and all purchases are private.
The #1 question we get is “what is your favorite place” and our answer is always the same. It’s impossible to compare the beauty of two extremes. Lees Ferry is an extreme. This destination is a site in Marble Canyon on the Colorado River separating Arizona from Utah. It will feel like you’re at the bottom of the Grand Canyon and in a way you are. To make this destination even more magical, it’s directly below the Glen Canyon damn that is breathtaking in its accomplishment.
Horse ShoeBend is a highly visited destination near Page, AZ. It was our first destination of SN1. Now two years later, we are at the same place, but 1,400 feet below on the water. Temperatures at Lees Ferry can reach well over 100 degrees, but the water temperate doesn’t change from 48 degrees. Fly Fishing at Lees Ferry is one of the few places in the world you can get hyperthermia from the waist down and heat stroke from the waist up!
Big thanks to Lees Ferry Anglers for the opportunity to fish with them and record a special day. Thanks toCaptainJimmy for showing us a great time and putting so many fish in the boat.
🎬Course https://howtostartayoutubechannel.com/
If you have ever thought about starting a YouTube channel or just want even better videos to document your journey, we share everything we've learned. Learn how to create, grow and monetize your channel without knowing anything about video or wasting time.
😂KYDInsiders https://www.patreon.com/KeepYourDaydream
*This is the best way for us to get to know you and follow your adventures. Click the link to learn more.
✅KYD AmazonPage https://www.amazon.com/shop/keepyourdaydream
*This is a small way to help keep our channel going that doesn’t cost you any more money and all purchases are private.
🎶MUSIC: http://bit.ly/Artlist-KYD-Music
Our latest music source for royalty free tracks for YouTube
We also use: http://www.epidemicsound.com/
****************** MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE ******************
Lees Ferry Angler: http://www.leesferry.com
Campgrounds: https://www.nps.gov/glca/planyourvisit/camping.htm
****************** START HERE VIDEOS ******************
KYD Playlists:
GrandGinger RV Tour: https://youtu.be/1LsuoLOksSo
Our CameraGearVideo: https://youtu.be/pZSMRNAiHMo
Our official Q&A video: https://youtu.be/ZKUDMI0QdFo
RV Newbie: 10 things you should know https://youtu.be/BsEs-CLBbaU
Payload & GVWR: https://youtu.be/qwFLOBrADBs
*********** SOCIAL MEDIA LINKS ****************
http://www.Instagram.com/KeepYourDaydream
http://www.Facebook.com/KeepYourDaydream
http://www.Twitter.com/KeepUrDaydream
http://www.KeepYourDaydream.com
*********** BECOME A KYD INSIDER **********
We want to get to know you! Meeting great people that are pursuing their dreams is what this is all about. Watch our Patreon video to learn about the KYD Insiders and get your own #TravelingGinger and take her with you on your next adventure!
https://www.patreon.com/KeepYourDaydream
*********** KYD PODCAST *********************
If you want to hear more great stories of people who turned “someday” into NOW... tune into Keep Your Daydream podcast. Stories of full-time RV, Sailing, ClimbingEverest to riding bikes across the world, each episode is inspiring.
http://www.KeepYourDaydream.com
*********** KYD GEAR & AMAZON **************
Check out our new Amazon page for our favorite gear. We’ll be adding more items each day. This is a great way to support the videos.
https://www.amazon.com/shop/keepyourdaydream
*We are a participant in the Amazon ServicesLLCAssociatesProgram, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.
*********** CAMERA GEAR *********************
Our Complete Camera Setup: https://youtu.be/pZSMRNAiHMo
Canon 6DMark ii http://amzn.to/2FD2xhq
Canon Rebel T5i http://amzn.to/2z4qyao
Go Pro Session 5 http://amzn.to/2ykVORx
GoPro Hero 5 Black http://amzn.to/2hnPllv
GoPro KarmaGrip: http://amzn.to/2hnjCRz
Rode VideoMic Pro Plus: http://amzn.to/2FKJmy9
Mavic Pro Platinum: http://bit.ly/KYD-DJI-Mavic-Pro-Plat
*We edit in Adobe Premiere Pro CC http://bit.ly/KYD-Adobe-Creative-Cloud
Keep Your Daydream, All Rights Reserved
*This channel for entertainment purposes only. We are not RV or travel experts. We share our opinions and what works for us, but you should do your own research.
*We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.

We learned the expensive way... wait for a need until you buy. Here are all our favorite RV products ✅https://www.amazon.com/shop/keepyourdaydream
*This is a small way to help keep our channel going that doesn’t cost you any more money and all purchases are private.
The #1 question we get is “what is your favorite place” and our answer is always the same. It’s impossible to compare the beauty of two extremes. Lees Ferry is an extreme. This destination is a site in Marble Canyon on the Colorado River separating Arizona from Utah. It will feel like you’re at the bottom of the Grand Canyon and in a way you are. To make this destination even more magical, it’s directly below the Glen Canyon damn that is breathtaking in its accomplishment.
Horse ShoeBend is a highly visited destination near Page, AZ. It was our first destination of SN1. Now two years later, we are at the same place, but 1,400 feet below on the water. Temperatures at Lees Ferry can reach well over 100 degrees, but the water temperate doesn’t change from 48 degrees. Fly Fishing at Lees Ferry is one of the few places in the world you can get hyperthermia from the waist down and heat stroke from the waist up!
Big thanks to Lees Ferry Anglers for the opportunity to fish with them and record a special day. Thanks toCaptainJimmy for showing us a great time and putting so many fish in the boat.
🎬Course https://howtostartayoutubechannel.com/
If you have ever thought about starting a YouTube channel or just want even better videos to document your journey, we share everything we've learned. Learn how to create, grow and monetize your channel without knowing anything about video or wasting time.
😂KYDInsiders https://www.patreon.com/KeepYourDaydream
*This is the best way for us to get to know you and follow your adventures. Click the link to learn more.
✅KYD AmazonPage https://www.amazon.com/shop/keepyourdaydream
*This is a small way to help keep our channel going that doesn’t cost you any more money and all purchases are private.
🎶MUSIC: http://bit.ly/Artlist-KYD-Music
Our latest music source for royalty free tracks for YouTube
We also use: http://www.epidemicsound.com/
****************** MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE ******************
Lees Ferry Angler: http://www.leesferry.com
Campgrounds: https://www.nps.gov/glca/planyourvisit/camping.htm
****************** START HERE VIDEOS ******************
KYD Playlists:
GrandGinger RV Tour: https://youtu.be/1LsuoLOksSo
Our CameraGearVideo: https://youtu.be/pZSMRNAiHMo
Our official Q&A video: https://youtu.be/ZKUDMI0QdFo
RV Newbie: 10 things you should know https://youtu.be/BsEs-CLBbaU
Payload & GVWR: https://youtu.be/qwFLOBrADBs
*********** SOCIAL MEDIA LINKS ****************
http://www.Instagram.com/KeepYourDaydream
http://www.Facebook.com/KeepYourDaydream
http://www.Twitter.com/KeepUrDaydream
http://www.KeepYourDaydream.com
*********** BECOME A KYD INSIDER **********
We want to get to know you! Meeting great people that are pursuing their dreams is what this is all about. Watch our Patreon video to learn about the KYD Insiders and get your own #TravelingGinger and take her with you on your next adventure!
https://www.patreon.com/KeepYourDaydream
*********** KYD PODCAST *********************
If you want to hear more great stories of people who turned “someday” into NOW... tune into Keep Your Daydream podcast. Stories of full-time RV, Sailing, ClimbingEverest to riding bikes across the world, each episode is inspiring.
http://www.KeepYourDaydream.com
*********** KYD GEAR & AMAZON **************
Check out our new Amazon page for our favorite gear. We’ll be adding more items each day. This is a great way to support the videos.
https://www.amazon.com/shop/keepyourdaydream
*We are a participant in the Amazon ServicesLLCAssociatesProgram, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.
*********** CAMERA GEAR *********************
Our Complete Camera Setup: https://youtu.be/pZSMRNAiHMo
Canon 6DMark ii http://amzn.to/2FD2xhq
Canon Rebel T5i http://amzn.to/2z4qyao
Go Pro Session 5 http://amzn.to/2ykVORx
GoPro Hero 5 Black http://amzn.to/2hnPllv
GoPro KarmaGrip: http://amzn.to/2hnjCRz
Rode VideoMic Pro Plus: http://amzn.to/2FKJmy9
Mavic Pro Platinum: http://bit.ly/KYD-DJI-Mavic-Pro-Plat
*We edit in Adobe Premiere Pro CC http://bit.ly/KYD-Adobe-Creative-Cloud
Keep Your Daydream, All Rights Reserved
*This channel for entertainment purposes only. We are not RV or travel experts. We share our opinions and what works for us, but you should do your own research.
*We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.

www.blackcanyonadventures.com
Black Canyon Rafting Adventure below Hoover Dam on the Colorado River is a half-day trip for the whole family. It starts at the base of Hoover Dam in Nevada and ends at Willow Beach Marina on Lake Mohave, Arizona.
Located a short distance from the Las Vegas Strip in Lake Mead National Recreation Area, Black Canyon is truly one of those unique places to visit. Trips depart from the Hacienda Hotel near Hoover Dam each day.
During your visit, be sure to venture out on the newest attraction at Hoover Dam - the new bridge over the Colorado River and Black Canyon. With views of 1,000 feet straight down, you'll see the Dam and Canyon like you've never them seen before.
Filmed in high definition this video featurette is a bonus feature on Finley-Holiday Films' Construction of Hoover Dam DVD. For DVDs and Blu-rays on America's Natonal Parks and vacation destinations, visit finleyholiday.com.

www.blackcanyonadventures.com
Black Canyon Rafting Adventure below Hoover Dam on the Colorado River is a half-day trip for the whole family. It starts at the base of Hoover Dam in Nevada and ends at Willow Beach Marina on Lake Mohave, Arizona.
Located a short distance from the Las Vegas Strip in Lake Mead National Recreation Area, Black Canyon is truly one of those unique places to visit. Trips depart from the Hacienda Hotel near Hoover Dam each day.
During your visit, be sure to venture out on the newest attraction at Hoover Dam - the new bridge over the Colorado River and Black Canyon. With views of 1,000 feet straight down, you'll see the Dam and Canyon like you've never them seen before.
Filmed in high definition this video featurette is a bonus feature on Finley-Holiday Films' Construction of Hoover Dam DVD. For DVDs and Blu-rays on America's Natonal Parks and vacation destinations, visit finleyholiday.com.

Colorado RiverDiscovery offers the most fantastic one day rafting tours anywhere on the mighty Colorado River. We provide tours near Glen Canyon Dam, half day raft trips as well as full day river rafting tours on motor rafts that are perfect for the entire family (kids ages 4 and up). We even offer full day rowing trips for those looking for a more relaxed adventure to experience the Colorado River at a slower pace.
As you float on one of the most dramatic stretches of river in the western United States, your experienced guide will tell the story of the area’s soaring sandstone cliffs, crystal blue-green waters, abundant wildlife, exploration by Major JohnWesley Powell and others, and the river’s modern role in the Southwest’s water and power delivery system.

Colorado RiverDiscovery offers the most fantastic one day rafting tours anywhere on the mighty Colorado River. We provide tours near Glen Canyon Dam, half day raft trips as well as full day river rafting tours on motor rafts that are perfect for the entire family (kids ages 4 and up). We even offer full day rowing trips for those looking for a more relaxed adventure to experience the Colorado River at a slower pace.
As you float on one of the most dramatic stretches of river in the western United States, your experienced guide will tell the story of the area’s soaring sandstone cliffs, crystal blue-green waters, abundant wildlife, exploration by Major JohnWesley Powell and others, and the river’s modern role in the Southwest’s water and power delivery system.

Travel video about destination Wonderland of Nature, North America.
Early in the morning, mist cloaks the deep valleys of the Grand Canyon. Soon it clears to reveal a huge, magical world. Millions of years ago, erosion and the relentless power of the Colorado River created this magnificent landscape and even today the river continues to force its way through the rock, sand and mud of the Grand Canyon. The first to discover the canyons were the AnasaziIndians who settled in the region around a thousand years ago. They hunted for food and also cultivated corn, pumpkins and beans in many of the neighbouring valleys and even today a small Indian tribe lives in a nearby canyon. For many years Monument Valley and its distinctive mesas in the northern part of Arizona have become one of the most famous natural landmarks in the United States. The glowing landscape owed its original fame to the American film industry and several famous western classics were filmed amid its striking scenery. The splendour of the Mesa Verde, or ‘GreenTable’, is well described by its name. The seemingly endless landscape reveals a broad and idyllic plain. Park Point is the highest vantage point, two thousand six hundred metres above sea level. The plateau is rich with forest and game and the Mesa’s oldest archaeological discoveries date back around twelve thousand years. Zion National Park attained its present day dimensions by 1939 and since then an increasing number of visitors have witnessed its magnificent rock formations. Despite, by American standards, its relatively small dimensions of six hundred square kilometres, the region consists of numerous diverse vegetation zones. Although the region’s flora is as diverse as the terrain upon which it grows, millions of years ago the area was a vast desert. The southern part of the Joshua Tree National Park is influenced by the hot and aridSonora Desert. In contrast, in the higher altitudes of the north is the cooler Mojave Desert. In spring various desert flowers begin to blossom and the otherwise sandy brown scenery is transformed into a colourful and shining ocean of floral splendour.

Travel video about destination Wonderland of Nature, North America.
Early in the morning, mist cloaks the deep valleys of the Grand Canyon. Soon it clears to reveal a huge, magical world. Millions of years ago, erosion and the relentless power of the Colorado River created this magnificent landscape and even today the river continues to force its way through the rock, sand and mud of the Grand Canyon. The first to discover the canyons were the AnasaziIndians who settled in the region around a thousand years ago. They hunted for food and also cultivated corn, pumpkins and beans in many of the neighbouring valleys and even today a small Indian tribe lives in a nearby canyon. For many years Monument Valley and its distinctive mesas in the northern part of Arizona have become one of the most famous natural landmarks in the United States. The glowing landscape owed its original fame to the American film industry and several famous western classics were filmed amid its striking scenery. The splendour of the Mesa Verde, or ‘GreenTable’, is well described by its name. The seemingly endless landscape reveals a broad and idyllic plain. Park Point is the highest vantage point, two thousand six hundred metres above sea level. The plateau is rich with forest and game and the Mesa’s oldest archaeological discoveries date back around twelve thousand years. Zion National Park attained its present day dimensions by 1939 and since then an increasing number of visitors have witnessed its magnificent rock formations. Despite, by American standards, its relatively small dimensions of six hundred square kilometres, the region consists of numerous diverse vegetation zones. Although the region’s flora is as diverse as the terrain upon which it grows, millions of years ago the area was a vast desert. The southern part of the Joshua Tree National Park is influenced by the hot and aridSonora Desert. In contrast, in the higher altitudes of the north is the cooler Mojave Desert. In spring various desert flowers begin to blossom and the otherwise sandy brown scenery is transformed into a colourful and shining ocean of floral splendour.

Page, Arizona has many exciting activities. Among them are Horseshoe Bend, Antelope Canyon and rafting trips down the Colorado River. They are all extremely fun and highly recommended.
The hike to Horseshoe Bend is an easy 3/4 of a mile and the view is amazing. You can see the Colorado River 1,000 feet below you.
Antelope Canyon is just outside of Page on Navajo land. You can take one of the guided tours through either Upper or Lower Antelope Canyon. What makes Antelope Canyon so special is the "flowing" shape of the walls, and the incredible way the beams of light radiate down from the openings of the canyon.
The Colorado RiverFloatTrip is an extremely fun and relaxing boat ride down the Colorado River. The water is very calm and the view up the canyon walls is amazing. They take you down the river to a little beach where you can swim and see some ancient Native American petroglyphs on the canyon walls. The tour guides are amazing and give you an incredible amount of history and and facts about the canyon and river.
For more information - http://Southwestwonders.com
For more on Antelope Canyon, watch The Best of Antelope Canyon
https://youtu.be/royJ57TbJs0
If you enjoyed this video, please like, share, and subscribe!
Thanks for watching!
Green Leaves by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Artist: http://audionautix.com/
Page AZ, Lake PowellTravel the world

Page, Arizona has many exciting activities. Among them are Horseshoe Bend, Antelope Canyon and rafting trips down the Colorado River. They are all extremely fun and highly recommended.
The hike to Horseshoe Bend is an easy 3/4 of a mile and the view is amazing. You can see the Colorado River 1,000 feet below you.
Antelope Canyon is just outside of Page on Navajo land. You can take one of the guided tours through either Upper or Lower Antelope Canyon. What makes Antelope Canyon so special is the "flowing" shape of the walls, and the incredible way the beams of light radiate down from the openings of the canyon.
The Colorado RiverFloatTrip is an extremely fun and relaxing boat ride down the Colorado River. The water is very calm and the view up the canyon walls is amazing. They take you down the river to a little beach where you can swim and see some ancient Native American petroglyphs on the canyon walls. The tour guides are amazing and give you an incredible amount of history and and facts about the canyon and river.
For more information - http://Southwestwonders.com
For more on Antelope Canyon, watch The Best of Antelope Canyon
https://youtu.be/royJ57TbJs0
If you enjoyed this video, please like, share, and subscribe!
Thanks for watching!
Green Leaves by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Artist: http://audionautix.com/
Page AZ, Lake PowellTravel the world

Canyonlands (USA) Vacation Travel Video Guide

Travel video about destination Canyonlands in The USA.
Canyonlands is a wild expanse of rock carved out by water and gravity that has created a large number o...

Travel video about destination Canyonlands in The USA.
Canyonlands is a wild expanse of rock carved out by water and gravity that has created a large number of bizarre formations located in the heart of the Colorado Plateau. Native American Indians, cowboys, river explorers and uranium miners were once the few who dared to traverse this untamed wilderness in South EastUtah. Established as a national park in 1964, the red terrain of Canyonlands covers five hundred and twenty-seven square miles between the Colorado River and the Green River.Canyonlands contains three distinct regions. To the north lies the Island in the Sky, to the west, The Maze, and to the east, The Needles. The height difference between the rivers and the valleys can be as much as fifteen hundred metres thus creating a dramatic and fascinating contrast of outstanding scenery. The remnants of ancient villages and petroglyphs created thousands of years ago are indications of prehistoric life in this region. The entire region is full of contrast and variation with geological formations such as The Devil's Kitchen, The Angel's Arch, Elephant's Hill and The Wooden Shoe and with vegetation that ranges from arid to lush.The silent realm of these momentous monuments will never cease to capture the imagination of all those who visit Canyonlands.
--------------
Watch more travel videos ► https://goo.gl/MXPgSs
Join us. Subscribe now! ► https://goo.gl/awdDrh
Be our fan on Facebook ► http://goo.gl/0xmbQk
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--------------
Thanks for all your support, rating the video and leaving a comment is always appreciated!
Please: respect each other in the comments.
Expoza Travel is taking you on a journey to the earth's most beautiful and fascinating places. Get inspiration and essentials with our travel guide videos and documentaries for your next trip, holiday, vacation or simply enjoy and get tips about all the beauty in the world...
It is yours to discover!

Travel video about destination Canyonlands in The USA.
Canyonlands is a wild expanse of rock carved out by water and gravity that has created a large number of bizarre formations located in the heart of the Colorado Plateau. Native American Indians, cowboys, river explorers and uranium miners were once the few who dared to traverse this untamed wilderness in South EastUtah. Established as a national park in 1964, the red terrain of Canyonlands covers five hundred and twenty-seven square miles between the Colorado River and the Green River.Canyonlands contains three distinct regions. To the north lies the Island in the Sky, to the west, The Maze, and to the east, The Needles. The height difference between the rivers and the valleys can be as much as fifteen hundred metres thus creating a dramatic and fascinating contrast of outstanding scenery. The remnants of ancient villages and petroglyphs created thousands of years ago are indications of prehistoric life in this region. The entire region is full of contrast and variation with geological formations such as The Devil's Kitchen, The Angel's Arch, Elephant's Hill and The Wooden Shoe and with vegetation that ranges from arid to lush.The silent realm of these momentous monuments will never cease to capture the imagination of all those who visit Canyonlands.
--------------
Watch more travel videos ► https://goo.gl/MXPgSs
Join us. Subscribe now! ► https://goo.gl/awdDrh
Be our fan on Facebook ► http://goo.gl/0xmbQk
Follow us on Twitter ► http://goo.gl/334ln5
--------------
Thanks for all your support, rating the video and leaving a comment is always appreciated!
Please: respect each other in the comments.
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Packing For The Grand Canyon - Colorado River Rafting Packing Guide

Here's how to pack for the Grand Canyon: If you're planning on rafting the Grand Canyon then you'll want to know how to pack for it. There are some better pract...

Here's how to pack for the Grand Canyon: If you're planning on rafting the Grand Canyon then you'll want to know how to pack for it. There are some better practices to follow when packing for a white water Colorado River rafting trip.
Here at Grand Canyon Expeditions we want you to have the best Colorado River rafting experience possible, and that takes some forethought on your end to make certain you bring the correct clothes and gear, and that you pack them correctly.
Learn more about GCEX (Grand Canyon Expeditions) here: https://www.gcex.com/
We provide you 3 separate items to help you pack for the Grand Canyon. Your clothing bag, or your brown bag that you'll store all of your clothes in. This bag will get tied off in the morning and won't be accessible throughout the day. Your sleeping dry bag, this is where you'll store your sleeping bad, and pad. This as well won't be accessible throughout the day. The third is an ammo can that will be accessible throughout the day, so this is where you'll store your lotions, glasses, extra shirts ect.
A Grand Canyon white water rafting trip will be a trip of a lifetime, so make certain you come prepared to fully enjoy the experience.

Here's how to pack for the Grand Canyon: If you're planning on rafting the Grand Canyon then you'll want to know how to pack for it. There are some better practices to follow when packing for a white water Colorado River rafting trip.
Here at Grand Canyon Expeditions we want you to have the best Colorado River rafting experience possible, and that takes some forethought on your end to make certain you bring the correct clothes and gear, and that you pack them correctly.
Learn more about GCEX (Grand Canyon Expeditions) here: https://www.gcex.com/
We provide you 3 separate items to help you pack for the Grand Canyon. Your clothing bag, or your brown bag that you'll store all of your clothes in. This bag will get tied off in the morning and won't be accessible throughout the day. Your sleeping dry bag, this is where you'll store your sleeping bad, and pad. This as well won't be accessible throughout the day. The third is an ammo can that will be accessible throughout the day, so this is where you'll store your lotions, glasses, extra shirts ect.
A Grand Canyon white water rafting trip will be a trip of a lifetime, so make certain you come prepared to fully enjoy the experience.

Chasing Rivers, Part 1: The Colorado | Nat Geo Live

National GeographicFreshwaterHeroPete McBride paddled and hiked the length of the Colorado River Delta, photographing and filming an unprecedented conservation success—the mighty river's triumphant, albeit temporary, return to the sea.
➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe
➡ Get More Nat GeoLive: http://bit.ly/MoreNatGeoLive
About Nat Geo Live (National Geographic Live):
Thought-provoking presentations by today's leading explorers, scientists, and photographers.
Get More National Geographic:
OfficialSite: http://bit.ly/NatGeoOfficialSite
Facebook: http://bit.ly/FBNatGeo
Twitter: http://bit.ly/NatGeoTwitter
Instagram: http://bit.ly/NatGeoInsta
About National Geographic:
National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their...

published: 10 Nov 2014

Take a 1,450 mile journey along the Colorado River

The Colorado River is so much more than something we raft and fish in. Millions of people in the western U.S. drink water that comes from the river. Millions more use electricity generated by hydroelectric power plants along the rivers 1,450-mile course. Most of the produce on our table is grown using water from the river and its tributaries. When you think about it, the Colorado River is so much more than just a river, its a lifeline for the southwestern U.S. In the Denver7 special presentation Colorado River: Lifeline of the West, hosts LisaHidalgo and Eric Lupher share the story of a river that has shaped the landscape for millions of years but is now having itself reshaped by people trying to harness its power.

Grand Canyon How it was made HD 1080p

Grand Canyon How it was made HD 1080p
A look at how the Grand Canyon in Arizona was believed to have been formed by the slow draining of an ancient lake which formed the Colorado River and carved the canyon out over millions of years.

published: 23 Sep 2014

Water resources increasingly strained - The Colorado River

For six million years, the Colorado River ran its course from its soaring origins in the Rockies to a once-teeming two-million-acre delta, finally emptying 14 million acre-feet of fresh water into the Sea of Cortez. But now, the river does not reach the sea. Indeed, the Colorado River has not reached the sea since 1998 but ends rather in a cracked and desolate expanse of barren mud flats and abandoned boats — a "dry river cemetery," as Mr. McBride says in one of the clips of this video. A few videos put together for the MSc in Environmental Technology.

published: 06 May 2013

René Marie: NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert

July 27, 2016 by PATRICK JARENWATTANANON • The Colorado River — better known for running through majestic National Parks and powering hydroelectric dams — forms an unlikely backdrop for the creation of a jazz song. But René Marie was answering phones at Denver's jazz radio station KUVO when she sat down across from a fellow volunteer fundraiser. He would soon invite her on a canoeing trip and, without yet having seen the eponymous river, she wrote the giddy "Colorado RiverSong" on the way there.
René Marie's is the sort of voice which first comes to mind when someone asks for a jazz singer — big and expressive, at home in classic swinging settings and comfortable in crowds. There's plenty to set her apart, though. She made her first recording in her early 40s, so she's a late bloomer by ...

Colorado River v. Colorado with Will Falk

"I recently helped the Colorado River sue the State of Colorado in a first-in-the-nation lawsuit — Colorado River v. Colorado — requesting that the United States District Court in Denver recognize the river’s rights of nature. These rights include the rights to exist, flourish, regenerate, and naturally evolve. To enforce these rights, the Colorado River also requests that the court grant the river “personhood” and standing to sue in American courts."
NationalCommunityRightsNetwork.org
DGRNewsService.org
CELDF.Org

published: 20 Nov 2017

Killing the Colorado (Full Program)

The story of the American West is deeply rooted in the Colorado River, which delivers fresh water to 30 million people. For years, there has been more Colorado water on paper and in people’s minds than in the river itself. Now climate disruption is making the situation even more troubling. Water levels are so low in LakeMead that soon they will trigger unprecedented mandatory water cutbacks in Arizona, Nevada and elsewhere.
That harsh reality is hard to grok with headlines about the abundance of water in California reservoirs and massive snow levels in the Sierra. How is the Colorado River connected to California’s other water concerns such as the Delta Tunnels and Salton Sea? Join us for a conversation about protecting the water many westerners take for granted and restoring one of the ...

published: 17 Feb 2017

Remains of a River: Full-Length Film

Two friends. 113 days. 1,700 miles. One endangered river.
From October 2011 to January 2012, Will Stauffer-Norris and Zak Podmore hiked and paddled from Wyoming's Wind River Mountains to Mexico following the Colorado River system from its farthest inland source to the sea, filming and narrating on the fly. The resulting film, Remains of a River, is an unforgettable story of friendship, adventure and environmental degradation. At turns inspiring and alarming, this will have you laughing, marveling, shaking your head, and maybe planning an adventure of your own.

published: 14 Sep 2012

The Colorado River, Climate Change and Drought

Johnathan Overpeck, Regents Professor of Geosciences, Hydrology and Atmospheric Sciences, The University of Arizona. jto@email.arizona.edu
Many current assessments of future climate and hydrologic change suggest that current drylands around the globe could become drier with continued anthropogenic climate change. In some regions, such as the southwest U.S., there is an observed trend in this direction. This is particularly true for the Colorado River, where the nature of drought is shifting to a more temperature-dominated climate extreme. At the same time, however, some recent and influential scientific assessments suggest that temperature-driven drying could be compensated by large precipitation increases with little net increase to water supply risk. A new approach integrating the exami...

History of the Colorado River

Operation Glen Canyon (Dam on the Colorado River) 1961 US Bureau of Reclamation

Water, WaterSupply, Water Treatment... playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL24B5221AB0AE1146
more at http://quickfound.net
"DEPICTS THE FIRST FOUR YEARS OF CONSTRUCTION AT GLEN CANYON DAM ON THE COLORADO RIVER IN NORTHEN ARIZONA, COVERING THE BRIDGE, THE DIVERSION OF THE COLORADO RIVER,AND THE POURING OF THE FIRST CONCRETE."
Public domain film from the US National Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and one-pass brightness-contrast-color correction & mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0...

published: 31 Oct 2016

colorado : river of wonder

published: 01 Jul 2017

BUSHCRAFT KAYAK OVERNIGHTER - GIRL IN THE WILD - COLORADO RIVER TX

hello family! I hope you enjoyed my Bushcraft kayak overnighter on the colorado river. I really loved the sheltersetu, fishing for catfish and the nightsky OMGAWD! I realized bushcrafting is hard in the winter, but also in texas ;) if you enjoyed this bugging out trip share and yada yada ya know what ta do! love and light!
join our family and SUBSCRIBE okay? thx :)
subscribe to my vlog channel!
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PO BOXStephanie Margeth
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you can support my channel on
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National GeographicFreshwaterHeroPete McBride paddled and hiked the length of the Colorado River Delta, photographing and filming an unprecedented conservation success—the mighty river's triumphant, albeit temporary, return to the sea.
➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe
➡ Get More Nat GeoLive: http://bit.ly/MoreNatGeoLive
About Nat Geo Live (National Geographic Live):
Thought-provoking presentations by today's leading explorers, scientists, and photographers.
Get More National Geographic:
OfficialSite: http://bit.ly/NatGeoOfficialSite
Facebook: http://bit.ly/FBNatGeo
Twitter: http://bit.ly/NatGeoTwitter
Instagram: http://bit.ly/NatGeoInsta
About National Geographic:
National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their world-class scientists, photographers, journalists, and filmmakers, Nat Geo gets you closer to the stories that matter and past the edge of what's possible.
Upcoming Events at National Geographic Live!
http://events.nationalgeographic.com/events/
Learn About the Freshwater Initiative
http://environment.nationalgeographic.com/environment/freshwater/about-freshwater-initiative/
The National Geographic Live series brings thought-provoking presentations by today’s leading explorers, scientists, photographers, and performing artists right to you. Each presentation is filmed in front of a live audience at National Geographic headquarters in Washington, D.C. New clips air every Monday.
ChasingRivers, Part 1: The Colorado | Nat Geo Live
https://youtu.be/xt5uJrWW1gE
National Geographic
https://www.youtube.com/natgeo

National GeographicFreshwaterHeroPete McBride paddled and hiked the length of the Colorado River Delta, photographing and filming an unprecedented conservation success—the mighty river's triumphant, albeit temporary, return to the sea.
➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe
➡ Get More Nat GeoLive: http://bit.ly/MoreNatGeoLive
About Nat Geo Live (National Geographic Live):
Thought-provoking presentations by today's leading explorers, scientists, and photographers.
Get More National Geographic:
OfficialSite: http://bit.ly/NatGeoOfficialSite
Facebook: http://bit.ly/FBNatGeo
Twitter: http://bit.ly/NatGeoTwitter
Instagram: http://bit.ly/NatGeoInsta
About National Geographic:
National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their world-class scientists, photographers, journalists, and filmmakers, Nat Geo gets you closer to the stories that matter and past the edge of what's possible.
Upcoming Events at National Geographic Live!
http://events.nationalgeographic.com/events/
Learn About the Freshwater Initiative
http://environment.nationalgeographic.com/environment/freshwater/about-freshwater-initiative/
The National Geographic Live series brings thought-provoking presentations by today’s leading explorers, scientists, photographers, and performing artists right to you. Each presentation is filmed in front of a live audience at National Geographic headquarters in Washington, D.C. New clips air every Monday.
ChasingRivers, Part 1: The Colorado | Nat Geo Live
https://youtu.be/xt5uJrWW1gE
National Geographic
https://www.youtube.com/natgeo

The Colorado River is so much more than something we raft and fish in. Millions of people in the western U.S. drink water that comes from the river. Millions more use electricity generated by hydroelectric power plants along the rivers 1,450-mile course. Most of the produce on our table is grown using water from the river and its tributaries. When you think about it, the Colorado River is so much more than just a river, its a lifeline for the southwestern U.S. In the Denver7 special presentation Colorado River: Lifeline of the West, hosts LisaHidalgo and Eric Lupher share the story of a river that has shaped the landscape for millions of years but is now having itself reshaped by people trying to harness its power.

The Colorado River is so much more than something we raft and fish in. Millions of people in the western U.S. drink water that comes from the river. Millions more use electricity generated by hydroelectric power plants along the rivers 1,450-mile course. Most of the produce on our table is grown using water from the river and its tributaries. When you think about it, the Colorado River is so much more than just a river, its a lifeline for the southwestern U.S. In the Denver7 special presentation Colorado River: Lifeline of the West, hosts LisaHidalgo and Eric Lupher share the story of a river that has shaped the landscape for millions of years but is now having itself reshaped by people trying to harness its power.

Grand Canyon How it was made HD 1080p

Grand Canyon How it was made HD 1080p
A look at how the Grand Canyon in Arizona was believed to have been formed by the slow draining of an ancient lake which f...

Grand Canyon How it was made HD 1080p
A look at how the Grand Canyon in Arizona was believed to have been formed by the slow draining of an ancient lake which formed the Colorado River and carved the canyon out over millions of years.

Grand Canyon How it was made HD 1080p
A look at how the Grand Canyon in Arizona was believed to have been formed by the slow draining of an ancient lake which formed the Colorado River and carved the canyon out over millions of years.

Water resources increasingly strained - The Colorado River

For six million years, the Colorado River ran its course from its soaring origins in the Rockies to a once-teeming two-million-acre delta, finally emptying 14 m...

For six million years, the Colorado River ran its course from its soaring origins in the Rockies to a once-teeming two-million-acre delta, finally emptying 14 million acre-feet of fresh water into the Sea of Cortez. But now, the river does not reach the sea. Indeed, the Colorado River has not reached the sea since 1998 but ends rather in a cracked and desolate expanse of barren mud flats and abandoned boats — a "dry river cemetery," as Mr. McBride says in one of the clips of this video. A few videos put together for the MSc in Environmental Technology.

For six million years, the Colorado River ran its course from its soaring origins in the Rockies to a once-teeming two-million-acre delta, finally emptying 14 million acre-feet of fresh water into the Sea of Cortez. But now, the river does not reach the sea. Indeed, the Colorado River has not reached the sea since 1998 but ends rather in a cracked and desolate expanse of barren mud flats and abandoned boats — a "dry river cemetery," as Mr. McBride says in one of the clips of this video. A few videos put together for the MSc in Environmental Technology.

July 27, 2016 by PATRICK JARENWATTANANON • The Colorado River — better known for running through majestic National Parks and powering hydroelectric dams — forms an unlikely backdrop for the creation of a jazz song. But René Marie was answering phones at Denver's jazz radio station KUVO when she sat down across from a fellow volunteer fundraiser. He would soon invite her on a canoeing trip and, without yet having seen the eponymous river, she wrote the giddy "Colorado RiverSong" on the way there.
René Marie's is the sort of voice which first comes to mind when someone asks for a jazz singer — big and expressive, at home in classic swinging settings and comfortable in crowds. There's plenty to set her apart, though. She made her first recording in her early 40s, so she's a late bloomer by any standard. Her tastes admit many influences, and she's got a penchant for original songwriting, especially where social justice intersects with personal biography. Her folky story-song "This Is (Not) A Protest Song" addresses homelessness and mental illness even in her own family.
Joined by her Experiment In Truth band (JohnChin on piano, EliasBailey on bass, QuentinBaxter on drums), Marie visited NPR headquarters to play songs from her new albumSound Of Red. She never specified the exact nature of that synesthetic idea, though the title track would seem to indicate that it's about the addictive and lusty blood-rush of performing — of seeing red while singing the blues. In the audience was the bold KUVO volunteer from that day 10 years ago. His name is Jesse, and they're now married and live in her home state of Virginia; they drove up together for this Tiny Desk concert.
Sound Of Red is available now:
iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/sound-of-red/id1092317407
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Sound-Red-Ren%C3%A9-Marie/dp/B01C5UNE1O
Set List:
"Colorado River Song"
"This Is (Not) A Protest Song"
"Sound Of Red"
Credits:
Producers: Patrick Jarenwattananon, NikiWalker; Audio Engineer: Josh Rogosin; Videographers: Niki Walker, ClaireHannah Collins, Morgan McCloy; Editor: Kevin Chiu; PA: SophieKemp; Photo: Claire Harbage/NPR.
For more Tiny Desk concerts, subscribe to our podcast: http://www.npr.org/podcasts/510292/tiny-desk-concerts-video

July 27, 2016 by PATRICK JARENWATTANANON • The Colorado River — better known for running through majestic National Parks and powering hydroelectric dams — forms an unlikely backdrop for the creation of a jazz song. But René Marie was answering phones at Denver's jazz radio station KUVO when she sat down across from a fellow volunteer fundraiser. He would soon invite her on a canoeing trip and, without yet having seen the eponymous river, she wrote the giddy "Colorado RiverSong" on the way there.
René Marie's is the sort of voice which first comes to mind when someone asks for a jazz singer — big and expressive, at home in classic swinging settings and comfortable in crowds. There's plenty to set her apart, though. She made her first recording in her early 40s, so she's a late bloomer by any standard. Her tastes admit many influences, and she's got a penchant for original songwriting, especially where social justice intersects with personal biography. Her folky story-song "This Is (Not) A Protest Song" addresses homelessness and mental illness even in her own family.
Joined by her Experiment In Truth band (JohnChin on piano, EliasBailey on bass, QuentinBaxter on drums), Marie visited NPR headquarters to play songs from her new albumSound Of Red. She never specified the exact nature of that synesthetic idea, though the title track would seem to indicate that it's about the addictive and lusty blood-rush of performing — of seeing red while singing the blues. In the audience was the bold KUVO volunteer from that day 10 years ago. His name is Jesse, and they're now married and live in her home state of Virginia; they drove up together for this Tiny Desk concert.
Sound Of Red is available now:
iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/sound-of-red/id1092317407
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Sound-Red-Ren%C3%A9-Marie/dp/B01C5UNE1O
Set List:
"Colorado River Song"
"This Is (Not) A Protest Song"
"Sound Of Red"
Credits:
Producers: Patrick Jarenwattananon, NikiWalker; Audio Engineer: Josh Rogosin; Videographers: Niki Walker, ClaireHannah Collins, Morgan McCloy; Editor: Kevin Chiu; PA: SophieKemp; Photo: Claire Harbage/NPR.
For more Tiny Desk concerts, subscribe to our podcast: http://www.npr.org/podcasts/510292/tiny-desk-concerts-video

"I recently helped the Colorado River sue the State of Colorado in a first-in-the-nation lawsuit — Colorado River v. Colorado — requesting that the United States District Court in Denver recognize the river’s rights of nature. These rights include the rights to exist, flourish, regenerate, and naturally evolve. To enforce these rights, the Colorado River also requests that the court grant the river “personhood” and standing to sue in American courts."
NationalCommunityRightsNetwork.org
DGRNewsService.org
CELDF.Org

"I recently helped the Colorado River sue the State of Colorado in a first-in-the-nation lawsuit — Colorado River v. Colorado — requesting that the United States District Court in Denver recognize the river’s rights of nature. These rights include the rights to exist, flourish, regenerate, and naturally evolve. To enforce these rights, the Colorado River also requests that the court grant the river “personhood” and standing to sue in American courts."
NationalCommunityRightsNetwork.org
DGRNewsService.org
CELDF.Org

Remains of a River: Full-Length Film

Two friends. 113 days. 1,700 miles. One endangered river.
From October 2011 to January 2012, Will Stauffer-Norris and Zak Podmore hiked and paddled from Wyomin...

Two friends. 113 days. 1,700 miles. One endangered river.
From October 2011 to January 2012, Will Stauffer-Norris and Zak Podmore hiked and paddled from Wyoming's Wind River Mountains to Mexico following the Colorado River system from its farthest inland source to the sea, filming and narrating on the fly. The resulting film, Remains of a River, is an unforgettable story of friendship, adventure and environmental degradation. At turns inspiring and alarming, this will have you laughing, marveling, shaking your head, and maybe planning an adventure of your own.

Two friends. 113 days. 1,700 miles. One endangered river.
From October 2011 to January 2012, Will Stauffer-Norris and Zak Podmore hiked and paddled from Wyoming's Wind River Mountains to Mexico following the Colorado River system from its farthest inland source to the sea, filming and narrating on the fly. The resulting film, Remains of a River, is an unforgettable story of friendship, adventure and environmental degradation. At turns inspiring and alarming, this will have you laughing, marveling, shaking your head, and maybe planning an adventure of your own.

Johnathan Overpeck, Regents Professor of Geosciences, Hydrology and Atmospheric Sciences, The University of Arizona. jto@email.arizona.edu
Many current assessments of future climate and hydrologic change suggest that current drylands around the globe could become drier with continued anthropogenic climate change. In some regions, such as the southwest U.S., there is an observed trend in this direction. This is particularly true for the Colorado River, where the nature of drought is shifting to a more temperature-dominated climate extreme. At the same time, however, some recent and influential scientific assessments suggest that temperature-driven drying could be compensated by large precipitation increases with little net increase to water supply risk. A new approach integrating the examination
of temperature, precipitation and drought risk indicate that Colorado River flows, and water supplies in the Southwest more generally, are already being seriously affected, and that continued climate change could result in much larger water supply losses than widely thought, even if mean precipitation increases.
Professor Overpeck (“Peck”) is a Regents Professor of Geosciences and Atmospheric Sciences, and also the Thomas R. BrownDistinguished Professor of Science, both at the University of Arizona. He is climate scientist who has written over 200 published works on climate and the environmental sciences, served as a Coordinating LeadAuthor for the Nobel Prize winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 4th Assessment (2007), and also as a Lead Author for the IPCC 5th Assessment (2014). Other awards include the US Dept. of CommerceGold Medal, a Guggenheim Fellowship, the Walter Orr Roberts award of the American Meteorological Society, and the Quivira Coalition’s RadicalCenterAward for his work with rural ranchers and land managers. Peck has active climate
research programs on five continents, loves trying to understand drought and megadrought dynamics (and risk) the world over, and is also a lead investigator of the Climate Assessment for the Southwest and the SW Climate Science Center – two major programs focused on regional climate adaptation. He has appeared and testified before Congress multiple times, is a Fellow of AGU and the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and tweets about climate-related issues @TucsonPeck.

Johnathan Overpeck, Regents Professor of Geosciences, Hydrology and Atmospheric Sciences, The University of Arizona. jto@email.arizona.edu
Many current assessments of future climate and hydrologic change suggest that current drylands around the globe could become drier with continued anthropogenic climate change. In some regions, such as the southwest U.S., there is an observed trend in this direction. This is particularly true for the Colorado River, where the nature of drought is shifting to a more temperature-dominated climate extreme. At the same time, however, some recent and influential scientific assessments suggest that temperature-driven drying could be compensated by large precipitation increases with little net increase to water supply risk. A new approach integrating the examination
of temperature, precipitation and drought risk indicate that Colorado River flows, and water supplies in the Southwest more generally, are already being seriously affected, and that continued climate change could result in much larger water supply losses than widely thought, even if mean precipitation increases.
Professor Overpeck (“Peck”) is a Regents Professor of Geosciences and Atmospheric Sciences, and also the Thomas R. BrownDistinguished Professor of Science, both at the University of Arizona. He is climate scientist who has written over 200 published works on climate and the environmental sciences, served as a Coordinating LeadAuthor for the Nobel Prize winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 4th Assessment (2007), and also as a Lead Author for the IPCC 5th Assessment (2014). Other awards include the US Dept. of CommerceGold Medal, a Guggenheim Fellowship, the Walter Orr Roberts award of the American Meteorological Society, and the Quivira Coalition’s RadicalCenterAward for his work with rural ranchers and land managers. Peck has active climate
research programs on five continents, loves trying to understand drought and megadrought dynamics (and risk) the world over, and is also a lead investigator of the Climate Assessment for the Southwest and the SW Climate Science Center – two major programs focused on regional climate adaptation. He has appeared and testified before Congress multiple times, is a Fellow of AGU and the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and tweets about climate-related issues @TucsonPeck.

Water, WaterSupply, Water Treatment... playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL24B5221AB0AE1146
more at http://quickfound.net
"DEPICTS THE FIRST FOUR YEARS OF CONSTRUCTION AT GLEN CANYON DAM ON THE COLORADO RIVER IN NORTHEN ARIZONA, COVERING THE BRIDGE, THE DIVERSION OF THE COLORADO RIVER,AND THE POURING OF THE FIRST CONCRETE."
Public domain film from the US National Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and one-pass brightness-contrast-color correction & mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glen_Canyon_Dam
Glen Canyon Dam is a concrete arch-gravity dam on the Colorado River in northern Arizona, United States, near the town of Page. The 710-foot (220 m) high dam was built by the U.S.Bureau of Reclamation (USBR) from 1956 to 1966 and forms Lake Powell, one of the largest man-made reservoirs in the U.S. with a capacity of 27 million acre feet (33 km3). The dam is named for Glen Canyon, a series of deep sandstone gorges now flooded by the reservoir; Lake Powell is named for John Wesley Powell, who in 1869 led the first expedition to traverse the Colorado's Grand Canyon by boat.
A dam in Glen Canyon was studied as early as 1924, but these plans were initially dropped in favor of a dam in Black Canyon (the Hoover Dam, completed in 1936). By the 1950s, due to rapid population growth in the seven U.S. and two Mexican states comprising the Colorado River Basin, the Bureau of Reclamation deemed the construction of additional reservoirs necessary. However, the USBR faced opposition when it proposed the Echo Park Dam in Utah's Dinosaur National Monument, which the nascent environmental movement saw as a legal threat to the status of protected lands. After a long fight, the USBR agreed not to build the dam in Dinosaur, but only if the environmentalists did not oppose the proposed dam in Glen Canyon.
Since first filling to capacity in 1980, Lake Powell water levels have fluctuated greatly depending on water demand and annual runoff. Operation of Glen Canyon Dam helps ensure an equitable distribution of water between the states of the Upper Colorado River Basin (Colorado, Wyoming, and most of New Mexico and Utah) and the LowerBasin (California, Nevada and most of Arizona). During years of drought, Glen Canyon guarantees a water delivery to the Lower Basin states, without the need for rationing in the Upper Basin. In wet years, it captures extra runoff for future use. The dam is also a major source of hydroelectricity, averaging over 4 billion kilowatt hours per year. The long and winding Lake Powell, known for its scenic beauty and recreational opportunities including houseboating, fishing and water-skiing, attracts millions of tourists each year to the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area.
In addition to its flooding of the scenic Glen Canyon, the dam's economic justification was highly questioned; with what critics saw as unnecessary damage to the wilderness, it became "a catalyst for the modern environmental movement," and was one of the last dams of its size to be built in the United States. The dam has been criticized for the huge evaporative losses from Lake Powell and its heavy impact on the ecology of the Grand Canyon, which lies downstream; environmental groups continue to advocate for the dam's removal. Water managers and utilities state that the dam is a major source of renewable energy and provides a vital defense against severe droughts...

Water, WaterSupply, Water Treatment... playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL24B5221AB0AE1146
more at http://quickfound.net
"DEPICTS THE FIRST FOUR YEARS OF CONSTRUCTION AT GLEN CANYON DAM ON THE COLORADO RIVER IN NORTHEN ARIZONA, COVERING THE BRIDGE, THE DIVERSION OF THE COLORADO RIVER,AND THE POURING OF THE FIRST CONCRETE."
Public domain film from the US National Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and one-pass brightness-contrast-color correction & mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glen_Canyon_Dam
Glen Canyon Dam is a concrete arch-gravity dam on the Colorado River in northern Arizona, United States, near the town of Page. The 710-foot (220 m) high dam was built by the U.S.Bureau of Reclamation (USBR) from 1956 to 1966 and forms Lake Powell, one of the largest man-made reservoirs in the U.S. with a capacity of 27 million acre feet (33 km3). The dam is named for Glen Canyon, a series of deep sandstone gorges now flooded by the reservoir; Lake Powell is named for John Wesley Powell, who in 1869 led the first expedition to traverse the Colorado's Grand Canyon by boat.
A dam in Glen Canyon was studied as early as 1924, but these plans were initially dropped in favor of a dam in Black Canyon (the Hoover Dam, completed in 1936). By the 1950s, due to rapid population growth in the seven U.S. and two Mexican states comprising the Colorado River Basin, the Bureau of Reclamation deemed the construction of additional reservoirs necessary. However, the USBR faced opposition when it proposed the Echo Park Dam in Utah's Dinosaur National Monument, which the nascent environmental movement saw as a legal threat to the status of protected lands. After a long fight, the USBR agreed not to build the dam in Dinosaur, but only if the environmentalists did not oppose the proposed dam in Glen Canyon.
Since first filling to capacity in 1980, Lake Powell water levels have fluctuated greatly depending on water demand and annual runoff. Operation of Glen Canyon Dam helps ensure an equitable distribution of water between the states of the Upper Colorado River Basin (Colorado, Wyoming, and most of New Mexico and Utah) and the LowerBasin (California, Nevada and most of Arizona). During years of drought, Glen Canyon guarantees a water delivery to the Lower Basin states, without the need for rationing in the Upper Basin. In wet years, it captures extra runoff for future use. The dam is also a major source of hydroelectricity, averaging over 4 billion kilowatt hours per year. The long and winding Lake Powell, known for its scenic beauty and recreational opportunities including houseboating, fishing and water-skiing, attracts millions of tourists each year to the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area.
In addition to its flooding of the scenic Glen Canyon, the dam's economic justification was highly questioned; with what critics saw as unnecessary damage to the wilderness, it became "a catalyst for the modern environmental movement," and was one of the last dams of its size to be built in the United States. The dam has been criticized for the huge evaporative losses from Lake Powell and its heavy impact on the ecology of the Grand Canyon, which lies downstream; environmental groups continue to advocate for the dam's removal. Water managers and utilities state that the dam is a major source of renewable energy and provides a vital defense against severe droughts...

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up (Video)

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up (OfficialMusic Video) - Listen On Spotify: http://smarturl.it/AstleySpotify
DownloadRick's Number 1album ""50"" - https://BMG.lnk.to/RickAstley50NG/itunes
Buy On iTunes: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHiTunes
Amazon: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHAmazon
Follow Rick Astley
Website: http://www.rickastley.co.uk/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rickastley
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RickAstley/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/officialric...Lyrics
We're no strangers to love
You know the rules and so do I
A full commitment's what I'm thinking of
You wouldn't get this from any other guy
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonn...

Creedence Clearwater Revival - Green River (Lyric Video)

Usher Carpool Karaoke

James and Usher hit the road to work, singing Usher's classics like "OMG" and "Caught Up" before the two work on James's club entrance and help a group of guys with some car trouble.
More Late Late Show:
Subscribe: http://bit.ly/CordenYouTube
Watch Full Episodes: http://bit.ly/1ENyPw4
Facebook: http://on.fb.me/19PIHLC
Twitter: http://bit.ly/1Iv0q6k
Instagram: http://bit.ly/latelategram
Watch The Late Late Show with James Corden weeknights at 12:35 AM ET/11:35 PM CT. Only on CBS.
Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream live TV, and watch full seasons of CBS fan favorites anytime, anywhere with CBS All Access. Try it free! http://bit.ly/1OQA29B
---
Each week night, THE LATE LATE SHOW with JAMES CORDEN throws the ultimate late night after party with a mix of...

published: 26 Jul 2017

The Platters: Moonlight on the Colorado

Colorado River Delta pulse flow

This is the leading edge of the pulse flow (surge of water) that's designed to bring life back to the Mexican stretch of the Colorado Ri ver.
This is the first time this stretch of the river has seen water in decades.

CAPS Colorado River

Rhonda does karaoke

Rhonda's 1st karaoke experience I had to beg but in a little pub next to the Colorado river in Bastrop, TX called the Bastrop Brewhouse it happened. I'll always remember TX as our almost year long honeymoon

published: 29 Nov 2013

Free Campsite! Colorado River BLM - Ehrenberg, AZ

Ox Bow Rd
Ehrenberg, ArizonaGPS: 33.595105, -114.536763
Amazing camping down by the Colorado river on the border of Arizona and California. The river road offers several camping spots over a few miles of well graded dirt roads. Great temps in the winter, and close to town for supplies. 5 Bar service on Tmobile and ATT
===================
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Pocahontas | Colors of the Wind | Disney Sing-Along

Paint with all the colors of the wind for this sing along.
SUBSCRIBE to get notified when new Disney videos are posted: http://di.sn/Subscribe
Get even more ...

Paint with all the colors of the wind for this sing along.
SUBSCRIBE to get notified when new Disney videos are posted: http://di.sn/Subscribe
Get even more Disney YouTube
Oh My Disney: https://www.youtube.com/user/OhMyDisney
Disney Style: https://www.youtube.com/user/disneysstyle
Disney Family: https://www.youtube.com/user/Disney
Mickey Mouse: https://www.youtube.com/user/DisneyShorts
You Might Also Like:
As Told By Emoji: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLpSnlSGciSWPZtUvlHLEp9_M5FPlC8LLa
Tsum Tsum Shorts: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLpSnlSGciSWPewHLHBq5HFLJBGhHrsKnJ
Sing Alongs: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLpSnlSGciSWPBUsHQKmXGX3TB-FTSO0U6
More Disney!
Instagram: http://Instagram.com/Disney
Twitter: http://Twitter.com/Disney
Facebook: http://Facebook.com/Disney
Tumblr: http://disney.tumblr.com/
A Little Disney History: From humble beginnings as a cartoon studio in the 1920s to its preeminent name in the entertainment industry today, Disney proudly continues its legacy of creating world-class stories and experiences for every member of the family.

Paint with all the colors of the wind for this sing along.
SUBSCRIBE to get notified when new Disney videos are posted: http://di.sn/Subscribe
Get even more Disney YouTube
Oh My Disney: https://www.youtube.com/user/OhMyDisney
Disney Style: https://www.youtube.com/user/disneysstyle
Disney Family: https://www.youtube.com/user/Disney
Mickey Mouse: https://www.youtube.com/user/DisneyShorts
You Might Also Like:
As Told By Emoji: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLpSnlSGciSWPZtUvlHLEp9_M5FPlC8LLa
Tsum Tsum Shorts: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLpSnlSGciSWPewHLHBq5HFLJBGhHrsKnJ
Sing Alongs: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLpSnlSGciSWPBUsHQKmXGX3TB-FTSO0U6
More Disney!
Instagram: http://Instagram.com/Disney
Twitter: http://Twitter.com/Disney
Facebook: http://Facebook.com/Disney
Tumblr: http://disney.tumblr.com/
A Little Disney History: From humble beginnings as a cartoon studio in the 1920s to its preeminent name in the entertainment industry today, Disney proudly continues its legacy of creating world-class stories and experiences for every member of the family.

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up (OfficialMusic Video) - Listen On Spotify: http://smarturl.it/AstleySpotify
DownloadRick's Number 1album ""50"" - https://BMG.lnk.to/RickAstley50NG/itunes
Buy On iTunes: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHiTunes
Amazon: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHAmazon
Follow Rick Astley
Website: http://www.rickastley.co.uk/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rickastley
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RickAstley/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/officialric...Lyrics
We're no strangers to love
You know the rules and so do I
A full commitment's what I'm thinking of
You wouldn't get this from any other guy
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching, but
You're too shy to say it
Inside, we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
And if you ask me how I'm feeling
Don't tell me you're too blind to see
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
(Ooh, give you up)
(Ooh, give you up)
Never gonna give, never gonna give
(Give you up)
Never gonna give, never gonna give
(Give you up)
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching, but
You're too shy to say it
Inside, we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you"

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up (OfficialMusic Video) - Listen On Spotify: http://smarturl.it/AstleySpotify
DownloadRick's Number 1album ""50"" - https://BMG.lnk.to/RickAstley50NG/itunes
Buy On iTunes: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHiTunes
Amazon: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHAmazon
Follow Rick Astley
Website: http://www.rickastley.co.uk/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rickastley
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RickAstley/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/officialric...Lyrics
We're no strangers to love
You know the rules and so do I
A full commitment's what I'm thinking of
You wouldn't get this from any other guy
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching, but
You're too shy to say it
Inside, we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
And if you ask me how I'm feeling
Don't tell me you're too blind to see
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
(Ooh, give you up)
(Ooh, give you up)
Never gonna give, never gonna give
(Give you up)
Never gonna give, never gonna give
(Give you up)
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching, but
You're too shy to say it
Inside, we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you"

Usher Carpool Karaoke

James and Usher hit the road to work, singing Usher's classics like "OMG" and "Caught Up" before the two work on James's club entrance and help a group of guys ...

James and Usher hit the road to work, singing Usher's classics like "OMG" and "Caught Up" before the two work on James's club entrance and help a group of guys with some car trouble.
More Late Late Show:
Subscribe: http://bit.ly/CordenYouTube
Watch Full Episodes: http://bit.ly/1ENyPw4
Facebook: http://on.fb.me/19PIHLC
Twitter: http://bit.ly/1Iv0q6k
Instagram: http://bit.ly/latelategram
Watch The Late Late Show with James Corden weeknights at 12:35 AM ET/11:35 PM CT. Only on CBS.
Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream live TV, and watch full seasons of CBS fan favorites anytime, anywhere with CBS All Access. Try it free! http://bit.ly/1OQA29B
---
Each week night, THE LATE LATE SHOW with JAMES CORDEN throws the ultimate late night after party with a mix of celebrity guests, edgy musical acts, games and sketches. Corden differentiates his show by offering viewers a peek behind-the-scenes into the green room, bringing all of his guests out at once and lending his musical and acting talents to various sketches. Additionally, bandleader Reggie Watts and the house band provide original, improvised music throughout the show. Since Corden took the reigns as host in March 2015, he has quickly become known for generating buzzworthy viral videos, such as CarpoolKaraoke."

James and Usher hit the road to work, singing Usher's classics like "OMG" and "Caught Up" before the two work on James's club entrance and help a group of guys with some car trouble.
More Late Late Show:
Subscribe: http://bit.ly/CordenYouTube
Watch Full Episodes: http://bit.ly/1ENyPw4
Facebook: http://on.fb.me/19PIHLC
Twitter: http://bit.ly/1Iv0q6k
Instagram: http://bit.ly/latelategram
Watch The Late Late Show with James Corden weeknights at 12:35 AM ET/11:35 PM CT. Only on CBS.
Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream live TV, and watch full seasons of CBS fan favorites anytime, anywhere with CBS All Access. Try it free! http://bit.ly/1OQA29B
---
Each week night, THE LATE LATE SHOW with JAMES CORDEN throws the ultimate late night after party with a mix of celebrity guests, edgy musical acts, games and sketches. Corden differentiates his show by offering viewers a peek behind-the-scenes into the green room, bringing all of his guests out at once and lending his musical and acting talents to various sketches. Additionally, bandleader Reggie Watts and the house band provide original, improvised music throughout the show. Since Corden took the reigns as host in March 2015, he has quickly become known for generating buzzworthy viral videos, such as CarpoolKaraoke."

Colorado River Delta pulse flow

This is the leading edge of the pulse flow (surge of water) that's designed to bring life back to the Mexican stretch of the Colorado Ri ver.
This is the first...

This is the leading edge of the pulse flow (surge of water) that's designed to bring life back to the Mexican stretch of the Colorado Ri ver.
This is the first time this stretch of the river has seen water in decades.

This is the leading edge of the pulse flow (surge of water) that's designed to bring life back to the Mexican stretch of the Colorado Ri ver.
This is the first time this stretch of the river has seen water in decades.